Weekly Voice Insights #73 -Master More. Speak Less.
Breath, listening, and working inside an unfinished process
I’m in rehearsals this week for a new musical workshop, The Willing, a piece inspired by the historical episode surrounding the Shakespeare forgeries attributed to William Henry Ireland and the role his father, Samuel Ireland, played in that story. I’m portraying Samuel, which is one of the reasons I was drawn to the project. There’s something compelling about stepping into a real historical figure, especially one caught between belief, reputation, and the desire for something to be true.
The work itself is still forming. The music is changing. Text is being adjusted. Decisions are happening in real time, often while we’re on our feet.
That kind of process is genuinely exciting. It’s also very different from most of my professional life in opera, where the music has been settled for centuries. In those rooms, the ground is already solid when you arrive. Your task is interpretation, not construction.
Here, adaptability matters just as much as preparation. The question that keeps circling for me is how to stay steady while things are still changing, and how not to let that sense of unfinishedness take over the body.
That question keeps bringing me back to breath.
In everyday speech, most of us take enough air to get through what we need to say. But when the situation asks for more clarity, more projection, or more weight, the breath we rely on often reflects something else entirely. It reflects whatever intention is present just before we speak, whether we’re aware of it or not.
If the unspoken thought before an entrance is something like, “I’m not quite sure what’s coming next,” the breath often mirrors that uncertainty. It narrows. It arrives cautiously. It carries exactly the amount of energy that intention has already supplied.
This is where Stoic practice and voice work begin to overlap for me.
I recently came across a Stoic sequence summarized by the acronym STOIC, and I’ve found myself thinking about it during this rehearsal process, especially because of how early breath appears in the sequence:
S — Stop. Pause the impulse.
T — Take three breaths.
O — Observe what’s happening without judging it.
I — Interpret the story you may be telling yourself.
C — Choose how to respond.
What interests me here is the placement of breath. It appears before explanation, before correction, and before action. It’s the point where restraint becomes something physical rather than theoretical.
In my own work, this same logic lives inside what I call Developing Your Authentic Voice, which follows a simple path: Intention, Breath, Tone, and Connection. I use these as practical tools for understanding how sound becomes individualized, through physical, observable choices that one person makes differently from another.
Working in a room where the material is still evolving has made that sequence feel especially relevant. When the music isn’t settled yet, it’s easy to feel pulled outward, to narrate what’s happening, or to comment on what might need to change. What has been more useful for me is returning to something quieter and more disciplined.
I’ve been reminding myself of a short phrase I use as a self check-in, especially when I feel the urge to verbalize every thought that comes into my head:
Master more. Speak less.
For me, that isn’t about withholding sound or participation. It’s a reminder to stay with what I’ve been given to do, to focus on mastering the task at hand, and to listen. “Speak less” already carries that implication. Listening is part of the discipline.
Not every reaction needs commentary. Not every thought needs to be voiced. In a room where work is still forming, there’s value in letting the work speak first.
I see a related pattern often in voice work. It’s easy to demonstrate a supported sound and have someone reproduce it successfully in the moment. They can imitate the volume, the energy, even the shape of the sound. But unless they become aware of what shifted in their body—how the breath behaved, where effort released—that sound doesn’t become dependable. It remains something borrowed.
The same thing happens in rehearsal and in speaking situations. If the physical act of delivery hasn’t been practiced without emotional charge, then whatever emotion is present in the moment will take the lead. Sometimes that emotion is excitement. Sometimes it’s uncertainty. Either way, the breath reflects it long before the voice does.
What’s been most helpful for me this week is returning again and again to the sequence itself. Intention first. Breath next. Tone follows. Connection comes last. When that order is respected, even briefly, the ground feels steadier, regardless of how much around me is still taking shape.
Working on a piece that’s still forming has clarified that for me. The music may not be settled yet, but the body can be. The breath can be. That steadiness doesn’t come from reassurance or external confirmation. It comes from familiarity with the physical act of delivery before emotion rushes in to fill the gaps.
This week’s rehearsals lead directly into public readings of The Willing, happening over coming weekend. The piece will be presented as a workshop reading, with the material still in motion and the audience invited into that process.
Reading dates:
Saturday, January 10 at 7:00 PM
Sunday, January 11 at 2:00 PM
Monday, January 12 at 7:00 PM
Location:
Depot Theater
506 W. Michigan Street
The readings are pay what you will, and open to anyone curious about new work being built in real time.
I’ve included the flyer below for details on how to reserve seats.








