Do you consider yourself capable of singing on pitch? If not, think you could learn? Or do you just wish you could, but dismiss the possibility, believing that you've always been tone deaf? That you couldn't hold a pitch to save your life?
Professional singer and teacher Carol Roan is a graduate of Indiana University. She holds degrees in vocal pedagogy and voice performance, and after years of researching the physiology of the human voice, Carol believes everyone is born with an ability to sing on pitch. According to her, whether or not we put our inherent singing ability to practice has a lot to do with how we see ourselves, what we believe about ourselves. Say, do you consider yourself musical? And how we see ourselves is greatly influenced by how we're taught. What were you told by others, for example, about your ability to sing when you were growing up?
In addition to an extensive professional singing career, Carol's also an author, communication coach, and an all-around optimist. Here is Carol speaking with Triad Arts Executive Producer David Ford about the relationship dynamics of music teachers and their students, and the impact that that relationship has on a student's musical self-image.