Thursday, May 10, 2007

"aaaaaaaaaaaaah"

At his recent masterclasses in Houston, Keith Underwood worked with several participants on his version of the Alexander Technique "whispered ah"procedure.

This usually began as a way of helping the participant learn to better direct and compress their air through good alignment of the upper back, neck and jaw.

After checking lower body alignment with the Alexander Technique procedure "monkey position", also called "position of mechanical advantage" which flexes all the major lower body joints (see Alexander Technique chair lesson video clip from 4/30 blog entry), Keith’s version of this procedure started with the participant raising the upper lip to expose all the upper teeth and making an "f" sound through the teeth. Then, with knees forward and thinking up the back. moving the jaw a bit forward (without any strain or discomfort), then allowing it to naturally drop open and, finally, whispering "ahhhhhh...."

The feeling I get when working on this is the sinking in of the upper back, head rising, as neck lengthens.

On a particularly easy attempt, it feels as if my head is the sun at dawn, rising above the horizon of my shoulders.

Keith also worked with participants to improve air speed by "buzzing the upper lip and surface area of the tongue together.

I have been experimenting with following a (Keith's version of the) "whispered ah," with touching the front edge of my tongue to the back of my lipline (inside lower lip) while lifting my upper lip into the "f" postion, then bringing the exposed underside of my lifted upper lip down to the surface of my tongue to create a buzz as I exhale. It feels a bit like I am squeezing the surface area of my tongue with my upper lip, while maintaining the relaxed position of my tongue in a downward sloping angle touching the back of my lower lip.

This action can be repeated multiple times in one breath, also adding a whispered "ehhhh" while positioning the upper lip. I call this the "eh-puh" exercise.

Give it a try!
Catherine

No comments: