voice release & manual facilitation of the larynx

Singing, speaking, conducting, or playing an instrument is physically demanding work.
These activities engage your whole body: from your breath and posture to the smallest muscles around your larynx.
When tension builds up, it can affect your breathing, posture, and overall freedom of movement.

Voice release & manual facilitation of the larynx gently releases and stretches all muscles involved in singing, speaking, and playing.

This brings your body back into natural alignment and helps you perform with greater ease, balance, and freedom.

It focuses on the diaphragm, torso, back, shoulders, neck, throat (in- and outside), jaw, tongue, and larynx, the most sensitive area for singers and speakers.

It combines gentle manual techniques with active and passive stretching, which you can also continue at home.

Why it matters

As singers, speakers, and musicians, our body is our instrument.
Just like dancers or athletes, we work in a highly physical and demanding environment and our performance depends on a healthy balance between body, mind, and technique.

If we would carefully maintain a valuable violin, why not take the same care of our own instrument – our body and voice?

Diagnosic or therapeutical?

Manual facilitation involves gentle stretching and mobilisation of the structures in and around the larynx.
It’s used both diagnostically to understand how posture and tension affect your voice and therapeutically, to restore balance and awareness.

By creating new proprioception, relaxation achieved in therapy can be maintained outside the session.
With a released and flexible voice instrument, learning new vocal techniques becomes easier and more efficient.

My approach

With over a decade of experience working with singers, instrumentalists, conductors, actors, teachers, and speakers, I understand the physical and emotional demands of a professional voice.
I know what it means to live through your instrument and I’ll guide you toward greater ease, balance, and vocal freedom. And I want to focus on you, the person behind the voice.

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