Also, should your larynx move when you sing?
Your larynx moves downward to open up this space. As you sing notes higher and higher in pitch, your tendency is to raise the position of the larynx. But you can learn to sing high notes while your larynx is in the down position, and you will learn that this produces a better, fuller vocal sound with less strain.
One may also ask, why does my larynx rise when I sing? This upward movement comes from the response of the muscles that suspend the larynx, who's function is for swallowing. Lowering the larynx opposes these muscles during singing and can eventually help to stop them from engaging when you don't want or need them.
Also asked, how should my throat feel when singing?
You shouldn't feel tightness or pain in your throat. You shouldn't have to tense any part of your body to excess (abs, throat, shoulder, tongue, jaw etc). It should feel GOOD.
How do you stabilize your voice?
Try the following suggestions to drop your larynx and leave it there while you make sound:
- Drop and breathe. When you feel the dropping sensation of the larynx, just breathe in and out (inhale and exhale) and leave the larynx in the low position.
- Drop and make sound.
- Drop and slide around on pitch.
- Drop and sing.