How To Be A Great Backup Singer

backup singer

It’s one thing to have a great voice. It is quite another to possess the skills it takes to make your worship leader want to schedule you as often as possible. Here are some solid tips on how to improve as a backup singer.

How To Be A Great Backup Singer

1. Master the three vital elements of singing

The three most important features of your voice are pitch (your ability to sing on key), tone (the actual sound of your voice – think of the difference in sound between an opera singer and a country singer), and breath control. Great breath control will really help your pitch and tone.

Here are 7 Keys To Improving Pitch and 10 Keys To Improving Your Singing.

2. Listen more than you sing 

Listen to recordings of modern worship singers and emulate their vocals. Listen to yourself as you sing. Record yourself. Listen to your worship leader and the other singers. Try to blend by matching their tone.

Note idiosyncrasies (such as: My worship leader likes to ad lib a little the second time through the chorus). Pay attention!

Also listen closely to the melody. Make sure you end each word at the same time as the worship leader. Make sure your rhythm is the same as his or hers. Make sure you are singing the melody or harmony the same way as the other singers.

3. Follow instructions. 

If your worship leader asked you to not sing the first time through the verse, don’t sing! Know when to sing on-mic and when to sing off-mic. Only sing on-mic when your part is needed.

If your worship leader tells you not to sing a certain harmony or note because it sounds bad, don’t sing it!

Watch carefully for cues and memorize the arrangement. When the worship leader goes into the chorus from the bridge, don’t come in halfway through that first sentence! It sounds must sharper when you come in at the beginning of a phrase. Otherwise you sound like a novice singer who isn’t paying attention.