What is the difference between singing and speaking?Why can't we play rap on piano?Finding and improving singing range and powerWhat is the difference between male head voice and falsetto?Learning how to sight sing without prior singingHow should a pop shield be set up?How can I tell if I (or other male singers) are using falsetto or head voice?What is wrong with my singing?Singing With CorkVoice gets progressively worse during the day?Should I stop practice singing and switch to fingerstyle guitar?Oktavism and low larynx

Is the Unsullied name meant to be ironic? How did it come to be?

How to cut a climbing rope?

Why did Jon Snow do this immoral act if he is so honorable?

Why didn't Thanos use the Time Stone to stop the Avengers' plan?

Can I summon an otherworldly creature with the Gate spell without knowing its true name?

Why does the hash of infinity have the digits of π?

Are black holes spherical during merger?

Is it possible to remotely hack the GPS system and disable GPS service worldwide?

Do I need full recovery mode when I have multiple daily backup?

Specific alignment within beginalign environment

Using credit/debit card details vs swiping a card in a payment (credit card) terminal

The roles understanding in the agile development / Is the PO always right?

Dad jokes are fun

Compaq Portable vs IBM 5155 Portable PC

Need to read my home electrical meter

Where's this lookout in Nova Scotia?

Is the field of q-series 'dead'?

Count Even Digits In Number

Website returning plaintext password

Parallel fifths in the orchestra

Why are GND pads often only connected by four traces?

Apt - strange requests to d16r8ew072anqo.cloudfront.net:80

Why isn't 'chemically-strengthened glass' made with potassium carbonate to begin with?

Is Jon Snow the last of his House?



What is the difference between singing and speaking?


Why can't we play rap on piano?Finding and improving singing range and powerWhat is the difference between male head voice and falsetto?Learning how to sight sing without prior singingHow should a pop shield be set up?How can I tell if I (or other male singers) are using falsetto or head voice?What is wrong with my singing?Singing With CorkVoice gets progressively worse during the day?Should I stop practice singing and switch to fingerstyle guitar?Oktavism and low larynx













8















I can both sing and speak C#3 . There would be a difference between using the note for singing and speaking.
What is the difference between singing and speaking?
If it depends on what kind of vocal technique one is using them please tell me so. I mean, some singing techniques are closer to speech than others.
My question is not so much about the theory but more on the practical side.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

    – Your Uncle Bob
    4 hours ago















8















I can both sing and speak C#3 . There would be a difference between using the note for singing and speaking.
What is the difference between singing and speaking?
If it depends on what kind of vocal technique one is using them please tell me so. I mean, some singing techniques are closer to speech than others.
My question is not so much about the theory but more on the practical side.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

    – Your Uncle Bob
    4 hours ago













8












8








8


1






I can both sing and speak C#3 . There would be a difference between using the note for singing and speaking.
What is the difference between singing and speaking?
If it depends on what kind of vocal technique one is using them please tell me so. I mean, some singing techniques are closer to speech than others.
My question is not so much about the theory but more on the practical side.










share|improve this question
















I can both sing and speak C#3 . There would be a difference between using the note for singing and speaking.
What is the difference between singing and speaking?
If it depends on what kind of vocal technique one is using them please tell me so. I mean, some singing techniques are closer to speech than others.
My question is not so much about the theory but more on the practical side.







voice






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Tim

108k10107273




108k10107273










asked 7 hours ago









HankHank

418416




418416







  • 1





    See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

    – Your Uncle Bob
    4 hours ago












  • 1





    See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

    – Your Uncle Bob
    4 hours ago







1




1





See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

– Your Uncle Bob
4 hours ago





See also: music.stackexchange.com/questions/82309/…

– Your Uncle Bob
4 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4














I think user45266's answer is spot-on - I would just add that singing also typically involves aligning the syllables in time with a musical rhythm.



Loosely, perhaps one could say:



  • Speaking is the utterance of words with pitch, pitch inflections and timings as expected for normal communication in the language in
    question. Typically, variations in pitch and timing are interpreted as adding
    nuance to the meaning - the study of these features is called Prosody.


  • Rapping is the utterance of words with pitch and pitch inflections expected for normal communication in the language in
    question, but in a musical rhythm


  • Singing is the utterance of words with pitch tending towards a musical scale, and usually in a musical rhythm






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago


















2














If I were pressed to answer, I'd say that singing is vocalising at defined and intentional frequencies. Speaking does not require any conscious effort to control the pitch of one's voice, and it doesn't need to have a clear pitch (whispering, vocal fry).



In some music, of course, the line gets blurred. Often, singers will deliver a line in a spoken way, giving a rough approximation of a melody but emphasizing the delivery style of conversation. Rap can sound like it has a melody, and sometimes it does (live performances of certain rappers sound almost nothing like the song one hears on the radio). There are plenty of styles (opera?) that intentionally mix the two, and though it's not a popular opinion, it could probably be argued that singing originated as a certain way of speaking.



Physically, there's no real difference between speaking and singing. Speaking and singing are just two human societal constructs for variances in the same phenomenon.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

    – Jonathan M
    4 hours ago











  • @JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

    – Dekkadeci
    48 mins ago











  • Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

    – user45266
    42 mins ago


















0














In my opinion you speak with a 'random' pitch.
You just go with what your body is the most comfortable with and on some words this might me slightly higher and sometimes lower. If you ask a question, you raise the pitch in many languages etc. but you don't go like, when I ask a question I always go up a major third above the pitch I was speaking before:P
So even tho you're using multiple pitches, it doesn't seem organized to a certain scale for example. Also you don't speak in a certain rhythm to a specific beat/bpm.
Just do me a favor. Can you read this out loud please? -> E E E E E A A A A A



-Thanks! ;)
But now... did it sound anything like this? Click me



Probably not, because you had no specific pitch and no specific rhythm in mind. You probably just read them monotonous and if there would've been a metronome in the background it probably wasn't a steady beat either.



Most rapping is for me where singing begins, because you speak with specific pitches to a specific rhythm. Just watch the first example here: Click me
This for me would be singing or at least musical speaking :D



Other than that... here are just some definitions which also may help you to make a choice where singing begins for you :P




singing: to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.




or




Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.







share|improve this answer























  • I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

    – chrylis
    1 hour ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "240"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85140%2fwhat-is-the-difference-between-singing-and-speaking%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














I think user45266's answer is spot-on - I would just add that singing also typically involves aligning the syllables in time with a musical rhythm.



Loosely, perhaps one could say:



  • Speaking is the utterance of words with pitch, pitch inflections and timings as expected for normal communication in the language in
    question. Typically, variations in pitch and timing are interpreted as adding
    nuance to the meaning - the study of these features is called Prosody.


  • Rapping is the utterance of words with pitch and pitch inflections expected for normal communication in the language in
    question, but in a musical rhythm


  • Singing is the utterance of words with pitch tending towards a musical scale, and usually in a musical rhythm






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago















4














I think user45266's answer is spot-on - I would just add that singing also typically involves aligning the syllables in time with a musical rhythm.



Loosely, perhaps one could say:



  • Speaking is the utterance of words with pitch, pitch inflections and timings as expected for normal communication in the language in
    question. Typically, variations in pitch and timing are interpreted as adding
    nuance to the meaning - the study of these features is called Prosody.


  • Rapping is the utterance of words with pitch and pitch inflections expected for normal communication in the language in
    question, but in a musical rhythm


  • Singing is the utterance of words with pitch tending towards a musical scale, and usually in a musical rhythm






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago













4












4








4







I think user45266's answer is spot-on - I would just add that singing also typically involves aligning the syllables in time with a musical rhythm.



Loosely, perhaps one could say:



  • Speaking is the utterance of words with pitch, pitch inflections and timings as expected for normal communication in the language in
    question. Typically, variations in pitch and timing are interpreted as adding
    nuance to the meaning - the study of these features is called Prosody.


  • Rapping is the utterance of words with pitch and pitch inflections expected for normal communication in the language in
    question, but in a musical rhythm


  • Singing is the utterance of words with pitch tending towards a musical scale, and usually in a musical rhythm






share|improve this answer













I think user45266's answer is spot-on - I would just add that singing also typically involves aligning the syllables in time with a musical rhythm.



Loosely, perhaps one could say:



  • Speaking is the utterance of words with pitch, pitch inflections and timings as expected for normal communication in the language in
    question. Typically, variations in pitch and timing are interpreted as adding
    nuance to the meaning - the study of these features is called Prosody.


  • Rapping is the utterance of words with pitch and pitch inflections expected for normal communication in the language in
    question, but in a musical rhythm


  • Singing is the utterance of words with pitch tending towards a musical scale, and usually in a musical rhythm







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 6 hours ago









topo mortotopo morto

28.3k247113




28.3k247113







  • 1





    I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago












  • 1





    I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







1




1





I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

– Todd Wilcox
6 hours ago





I think this breakdown is better, because the rhythmic element is important. Again, we should not neglect the languages where pitch is part of the syntactic information.

– Todd Wilcox
6 hours ago











2














If I were pressed to answer, I'd say that singing is vocalising at defined and intentional frequencies. Speaking does not require any conscious effort to control the pitch of one's voice, and it doesn't need to have a clear pitch (whispering, vocal fry).



In some music, of course, the line gets blurred. Often, singers will deliver a line in a spoken way, giving a rough approximation of a melody but emphasizing the delivery style of conversation. Rap can sound like it has a melody, and sometimes it does (live performances of certain rappers sound almost nothing like the song one hears on the radio). There are plenty of styles (opera?) that intentionally mix the two, and though it's not a popular opinion, it could probably be argued that singing originated as a certain way of speaking.



Physically, there's no real difference between speaking and singing. Speaking and singing are just two human societal constructs for variances in the same phenomenon.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

    – Jonathan M
    4 hours ago











  • @JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

    – Dekkadeci
    48 mins ago











  • Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

    – user45266
    42 mins ago















2














If I were pressed to answer, I'd say that singing is vocalising at defined and intentional frequencies. Speaking does not require any conscious effort to control the pitch of one's voice, and it doesn't need to have a clear pitch (whispering, vocal fry).



In some music, of course, the line gets blurred. Often, singers will deliver a line in a spoken way, giving a rough approximation of a melody but emphasizing the delivery style of conversation. Rap can sound like it has a melody, and sometimes it does (live performances of certain rappers sound almost nothing like the song one hears on the radio). There are plenty of styles (opera?) that intentionally mix the two, and though it's not a popular opinion, it could probably be argued that singing originated as a certain way of speaking.



Physically, there's no real difference between speaking and singing. Speaking and singing are just two human societal constructs for variances in the same phenomenon.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

    – Jonathan M
    4 hours ago











  • @JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

    – Dekkadeci
    48 mins ago











  • Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

    – user45266
    42 mins ago













2












2








2







If I were pressed to answer, I'd say that singing is vocalising at defined and intentional frequencies. Speaking does not require any conscious effort to control the pitch of one's voice, and it doesn't need to have a clear pitch (whispering, vocal fry).



In some music, of course, the line gets blurred. Often, singers will deliver a line in a spoken way, giving a rough approximation of a melody but emphasizing the delivery style of conversation. Rap can sound like it has a melody, and sometimes it does (live performances of certain rappers sound almost nothing like the song one hears on the radio). There are plenty of styles (opera?) that intentionally mix the two, and though it's not a popular opinion, it could probably be argued that singing originated as a certain way of speaking.



Physically, there's no real difference between speaking and singing. Speaking and singing are just two human societal constructs for variances in the same phenomenon.






share|improve this answer













If I were pressed to answer, I'd say that singing is vocalising at defined and intentional frequencies. Speaking does not require any conscious effort to control the pitch of one's voice, and it doesn't need to have a clear pitch (whispering, vocal fry).



In some music, of course, the line gets blurred. Often, singers will deliver a line in a spoken way, giving a rough approximation of a melody but emphasizing the delivery style of conversation. Rap can sound like it has a melody, and sometimes it does (live performances of certain rappers sound almost nothing like the song one hears on the radio). There are plenty of styles (opera?) that intentionally mix the two, and though it's not a popular opinion, it could probably be argued that singing originated as a certain way of speaking.



Physically, there's no real difference between speaking and singing. Speaking and singing are just two human societal constructs for variances in the same phenomenon.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 7 hours ago









user45266user45266

5,0661939




5,0661939







  • 3





    One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

    – Jonathan M
    4 hours ago











  • @JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

    – Dekkadeci
    48 mins ago











  • Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

    – user45266
    42 mins ago












  • 3





    One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

    – Todd Wilcox
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

    – Jonathan M
    4 hours ago











  • @JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

    – Dekkadeci
    48 mins ago











  • Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

    – user45266
    42 mins ago







3




3





One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

– Todd Wilcox
6 hours ago






One wrinkle here is that there are languages (notably Mandarin and Cantonese) where the pitch of vocalization contains syntactic information, so the lines are blurred even before we get to different kinds of music.

– Todd Wilcox
6 hours ago





1




1





Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

– Jonathan M
4 hours ago





Mandarin doesn't have a defined frequency, relative or absolute. Instead the four tones are: steady pitch, rising pitch, falling pitch, fall-then-rise pitch.

– Jonathan M
4 hours ago













@JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

– Dekkadeci
48 mins ago





@JonathanM - I'd say that descriptors of tones such as "rising pitch" define relative pitches of the starts and ends of words. (I speak some Mandarin Chinese myself.)

– Dekkadeci
48 mins ago













Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

– user45266
42 mins ago





Curious: Can Mandarin Chinese be spoken in a whisper without losing syntactic information?

– user45266
42 mins ago











0














In my opinion you speak with a 'random' pitch.
You just go with what your body is the most comfortable with and on some words this might me slightly higher and sometimes lower. If you ask a question, you raise the pitch in many languages etc. but you don't go like, when I ask a question I always go up a major third above the pitch I was speaking before:P
So even tho you're using multiple pitches, it doesn't seem organized to a certain scale for example. Also you don't speak in a certain rhythm to a specific beat/bpm.
Just do me a favor. Can you read this out loud please? -> E E E E E A A A A A



-Thanks! ;)
But now... did it sound anything like this? Click me



Probably not, because you had no specific pitch and no specific rhythm in mind. You probably just read them monotonous and if there would've been a metronome in the background it probably wasn't a steady beat either.



Most rapping is for me where singing begins, because you speak with specific pitches to a specific rhythm. Just watch the first example here: Click me
This for me would be singing or at least musical speaking :D



Other than that... here are just some definitions which also may help you to make a choice where singing begins for you :P




singing: to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.




or




Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.







share|improve this answer























  • I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

    – chrylis
    1 hour ago















0














In my opinion you speak with a 'random' pitch.
You just go with what your body is the most comfortable with and on some words this might me slightly higher and sometimes lower. If you ask a question, you raise the pitch in many languages etc. but you don't go like, when I ask a question I always go up a major third above the pitch I was speaking before:P
So even tho you're using multiple pitches, it doesn't seem organized to a certain scale for example. Also you don't speak in a certain rhythm to a specific beat/bpm.
Just do me a favor. Can you read this out loud please? -> E E E E E A A A A A



-Thanks! ;)
But now... did it sound anything like this? Click me



Probably not, because you had no specific pitch and no specific rhythm in mind. You probably just read them monotonous and if there would've been a metronome in the background it probably wasn't a steady beat either.



Most rapping is for me where singing begins, because you speak with specific pitches to a specific rhythm. Just watch the first example here: Click me
This for me would be singing or at least musical speaking :D



Other than that... here are just some definitions which also may help you to make a choice where singing begins for you :P




singing: to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.




or




Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.







share|improve this answer























  • I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

    – chrylis
    1 hour ago













0












0








0







In my opinion you speak with a 'random' pitch.
You just go with what your body is the most comfortable with and on some words this might me slightly higher and sometimes lower. If you ask a question, you raise the pitch in many languages etc. but you don't go like, when I ask a question I always go up a major third above the pitch I was speaking before:P
So even tho you're using multiple pitches, it doesn't seem organized to a certain scale for example. Also you don't speak in a certain rhythm to a specific beat/bpm.
Just do me a favor. Can you read this out loud please? -> E E E E E A A A A A



-Thanks! ;)
But now... did it sound anything like this? Click me



Probably not, because you had no specific pitch and no specific rhythm in mind. You probably just read them monotonous and if there would've been a metronome in the background it probably wasn't a steady beat either.



Most rapping is for me where singing begins, because you speak with specific pitches to a specific rhythm. Just watch the first example here: Click me
This for me would be singing or at least musical speaking :D



Other than that... here are just some definitions which also may help you to make a choice where singing begins for you :P




singing: to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.




or




Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.







share|improve this answer













In my opinion you speak with a 'random' pitch.
You just go with what your body is the most comfortable with and on some words this might me slightly higher and sometimes lower. If you ask a question, you raise the pitch in many languages etc. but you don't go like, when I ask a question I always go up a major third above the pitch I was speaking before:P
So even tho you're using multiple pitches, it doesn't seem organized to a certain scale for example. Also you don't speak in a certain rhythm to a specific beat/bpm.
Just do me a favor. Can you read this out loud please? -> E E E E E A A A A A



-Thanks! ;)
But now... did it sound anything like this? Click me



Probably not, because you had no specific pitch and no specific rhythm in mind. You probably just read them monotonous and if there would've been a metronome in the background it probably wasn't a steady beat either.



Most rapping is for me where singing begins, because you speak with specific pitches to a specific rhythm. Just watch the first example here: Click me
This for me would be singing or at least musical speaking :D



Other than that... here are just some definitions which also may help you to make a choice where singing begins for you :P




singing: to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.




or




Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 5 hours ago









AndyAndy

63016




63016












  • I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

    – chrylis
    1 hour ago

















  • I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

    – chrylis
    1 hour ago
















I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

– chrylis
1 hour ago





I'm not entirely sure what it says about me that my first reflex on seeing your series of vowels was to pronounce it saeculorum, amen.

– chrylis
1 hour ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Music: Practice & Theory Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85140%2fwhat-is-the-difference-between-singing-and-speaking%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Canceling a color specificationRandomly assigning color to Graphics3D objects?Default color for Filling in Mathematica 9Coloring specific elements of sets with a prime modified order in an array plotHow to pick a color differing significantly from the colors already in a given color list?Detection of the text colorColor numbers based on their valueCan color schemes for use with ColorData include opacity specification?My dynamic color schemes

Invision Community Contents History See also References External links Navigation menuProprietaryinvisioncommunity.comIPS Community ForumsIPS Community Forumsthis blog entry"License Changes, IP.Board 3.4, and the Future""Interview -- Matt Mecham of Ibforums""CEO Invision Power Board, Matt Mecham Is a Liar, Thief!"IPB License Explanation 1.3, 1.3.1, 2.0, and 2.1ArchivedSecurity Fixes, Updates And Enhancements For IPB 1.3.1Archived"New Demo Accounts - Invision Power Services"the original"New Default Skin"the original"Invision Power Board 3.0.0 and Applications Released"the original"Archived copy"the original"Perpetual licenses being done away with""Release Notes - Invision Power Services""Introducing: IPS Community Suite 4!"Invision Community Release Notes

199年 目錄 大件事 到箇年出世嗰人 到箇年死嗰人 節慶、風俗習慣 導覽選單