News By Readers

Singing to good health

By Karla Callaway

Published: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:45 PM CST
Graham Welch, director for advanced music education at London’s Roehampton Institute, states the following:

  • Sing­ing exercises the vocal cords and keeps them youthful, even in old age.
  • Singing expands your chest, back and shoulders thus improv­ing posture.
  • Singing also lifts moods and releases pain-relieving endorphins.
  • Singing improves circulation which boosts the body’s immune system.
  • Singers suffer less depression, make fewer doctor visits a year, take fewer medications and have increased their other activities.
  • Singing gives the lungs a workout, tones up abdominal and intercostal muscles and the diaphragm, and stimulates circulation. 
  • Singing makes us breathe more deeply than even many forms of strenuous exercise, so we take in more oxygen, improve aerobic capacity and experience a release of muscle tension as well.
  • Not only does singing promote well-being, it can also help to prolong life.


Are YOU ready to add a healthy, new dimension to your life? Try singing! Sharing the joy of singing will enrich your life far be­yond the notes and music.

For more information about singing contact Voices of the Metro performance chorus at 214-551-5659, email membership@voicesmetro.org or visit our website at www.voicesmetro.org.





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