Interview With Veteran Live Performance Coach Diane Kimbrough - Part1
All Things Vocal Podcast - Podcast tekijän mukaan Judy Rodman
This is the audio version of the blogpost you can find at AllThingsVocal.com. Today's topic is my interview with Diane Kimbrough. Listen to this podcast episode for tips to improve your live performances, your confidence on stage and your audience impact. You'll also learn how Diane's performance coaching and my vocal coaching work together in a synergy that supports instead of confuses our artist clients. This podcast is now playing at iTunes , Google Play, TuneIn Radio, . Subscribe and don't miss an episode... and please leave a review where you like to listen! REVIEWS ARE MUCH NEEDED and APPRECIATED! If you’d like help with live performance, contact Diane at her website http://dianekimbrough.com/. For help with any vocal matter, try Power, Path and Performance vocal training, available at www.JudyRodman.com in vocal lessons and on CD courses. Subjects covered in this episode include: Diane's background & experience Explanation of what live performance coaching is. How Diane uses her dance and acting experience in her coaching. Defining stage presence. How Diane and I work synergistically to increase stage and vocal abilities. The value of getting live performance coaching before recording final studio vocals. How both of us work on focusing message delivery. Diane's coaching strategy of videotaping performance and playing it back without sound. A vital understanding Diane wants artists to get out of her coaching sessions: The song itself - the structure of the music and the lyrics - should largely dictate stage movement. How that goes with my vocal training. How to figure out who your voice needs to represent in any song. Diane and I discuss and solve our disparate ways of approaching and coaching authenticity. We discuss what is and is not 'real', how to use acting techniques to make the moment real for the audience even when it's not real for you. Why you don't need to freak out at the thought of acting. Case study about an artist we both successfully worked with who had a serious eating disorder and issues with 'feeling' emotion. How critical voices and situations like bad-fitting heels affect confidence on stage. Knowledge brings power. Case study about another of our artists who we helped go from serious insecurity to up & coming artist catching serious career fire. Diane says it's best to have some stage experience before booking coaching sessions. Ways Diane asks clients to practice what they learn from her. Written homework is assigned, along with continual videotaping and silent viewing to review how audiences see you. The importance of separating singing and stage movement practice. Why you should put your guitar down and try singing without it. How that same strategy - separate practice - is a wise way to practice vocal technique. Diane and I bat around the concept of singing to the one heart. We use different words for the same thing... Diane calls it having a conversation on a melodic line. PLEASE NOTE: There was so much we shared I decided to split the interview. This is Part 1. Listen to Part 2, on the episode following this one. About Diane Kimbrough: As an actress, dancer, and choreographer, Diane’s career has taken her to Europe, South America, the Caribbean, and the Middle East where she has directed and choreographed live shows for companies including IBM, Kawasaki, NCR, Chevrolet, Texaco, and Suzuki. She herself has appeared on stage & television with an array of stars from Garth Brooks to the L.A. Dodgers.Her work has appeared on every major television network. She has staged a wide array of events from ABC’s “Monday Night Football” promo to “The All-American Thanksgiving Day Parade” for CBS. Diane is a veteran of eight seasons of the CMAs (Country Music Association Awards), staging such knockout numbers as Alan Jackson’s “Chattahoochie”, Brad Paisley’s “Online” and Shania Twain’s “I’m Outta Here” and “Any Man of Mine”.Managers and record labels, including Arista, Atlantic, Capitol, Columb