IELTS Speaking for Success - 🎤 Singing (S08E07) + Transcript
Episode Date: October 24, 2022Do you like singing? Do you often sing? Have you ever learned how to sing? Who do you want to sing for? Do you think singing can bring happiness to people? When do you like to sing? Tune in and have ...a great day! - Watch the video version of this episode: https://youtu.be/2o6vRWuwvg0 Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s08e07 Our IELTS Writing podcast: https://linktr.ee/wfspremium Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2022 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello, lovely. I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are the host of the AIL Speaking for Success podcast,
podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills,
as well as your listening skills along the way.
We started this podcast to give you super-duper grammar and gorgeous vocabulary
for your high AYOT school, Ben 9th school.
Maria, are you humming?
Yes.
It's my singing.
You don't like my singing?
It's dumbing and singing are different things.
Let's talk about singing.
Yes, dear listener, singing is a fresh, I old speaking part one topic.
So today, singing it is.
We've got singing for the first time, and there's another first, conditional, which is our grammar focus today.
Ooh, yummy, yummy, conditionals.
So listen out for all of the examples of conditionals in my answers and try and transfer them to different ones.
Rory, do you like singing?
Well, if it's done by professionals like choir singers or opera singers, then I'll listen.
But if we're talking about me, then absolutely not.
I'm completely tone deaf.
Do you often sing?
Not really.
And if I ever do, it will be obvious why.
Because I can't really hold the tune or remember the lyrics to be.
honest with you. We used to do it at school though, and it was nice when everybody harmonised.
Have you ever learned how to sing? Not that I can recall, but if I had more time in the future
for it, then I might. Oh, well, actually, that's not true. We did it at school, of course.
Although, to be honest with you, I was always out of tune when I did it by myself.
Who do you want to sing for? Well, ideally no one. But if I have to, then I'll be doing it for
a private audience and they'll have ear defenders on. I did try singing karaoke once, but that didn't
end well for anybody. It sounded like I was swinging a bag of cats around. Do you think singing can
bring happiness to people? Well, if it's in tune and the words are positive and it's got
like a happy rhythm or beat to it, something like gospel music, for example. When do you like to sing?
Well, I won't if I'm the one making that decision. I don't really like the sound of my own voice.
in general, let alone when I sing. I think I used to sing in the shower, but obviously no one's
able to hear that, are they? What kinds of songs do you like to sing? If it's a good day, then it'll be
something upbeat, well, like rock music, for example, but if it's not, then something gentle and calm,
like, oh, like baroque music, for example. Is it difficult to sing well? Well, if we're talking about me,
then the answer will be a definite yes, and probably if we're talking in general as well.
singing is a skill and you have to work on it.
I think opera singers spend years working on their range, don't they?
Do you want to be a singer?
If there's one thing, I'll never be, it's a singer.
I think my vocal cords are closer to, oh, I don't know,
cheese strings rather than violin strings.
Thank you, Rory, for your answers.
There were music to our ears.
Do check out our premium episodes
with fresh, ILD speaking, part two,
and part three topics.
And also we are doing the writing episodes for you
where Rory and I are discussing the essays, graphs,
and give you super-duper grammar, vocabulary and the structure.
The links are in the description.
Do check them out.
Don't stop me now.
No, having such a good time.
I'm having a ball.
Queen.
You're having a ball with that song.
I'm not.
I'm not singing along.
I can't sing.
Don't stop me.
Come on, Rory, give us a tune.
Come on.
Maybe you was like a song.
No, no, you sang for me right before this episode.
Come on.
When did I sing?
No, no, right before the episode.
We were discussing what the soundtrack for this episode is going to be.
And you said, you were kind of like,
that's how I sound when I sing.
What's a good song?
I don't know any good songs.
But I do know a lot about vocabulary and grammar.
Let's talk about that.
Choir is pronounced as choir, not whir.
Because it's written like this.
It's it.
No, it's written like this.
So it's crazy.
But you say choir, right?
It's not chore, not chore.
Choir.
And choir is this.
So you can say, I like singing if it's done by professional choirs or opera singers.
Are there different kinds of opera singers?
Like soprano is an opera singer.
isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Different kinds of voices.
Yeah.
But Rory is tone deaf.
Oh, poor you.
Well, I'm not really tone deaf,
but it's just another way of saying
I'm rubbish at singing and, you know,
following music.
Yeah.
So you can say, I'm bad at singing.
I'm completely tone deaf.
Deaf is like you can't hear anything,
but tone deaf, you don't distinguish here
between these little tones.
You sing.
out of tune all the time.
But that just means that I'm not singing in a consistent manner
or in a manner that's consistent with the music.
And you also said, I can't hold a tune.
But that's the same thing.
Being in tune and holding the tune is like continuing to do it.
So I can't sing, I can't hold a tune.
Is there an expression, for example, in Russian,
we have this, a bear stepped on my ear, I think.
do you have something like in English
like somebody stepped on your ear
that's why you can't really sing
and you can't really understand music
I think it's just called being rubbish at singing
I'm rubbish at singing
and then you can say
I used to sing at school
and I enjoyed when everyone
harmonized
yeah that's when everyone's got the same
I'm gonna really mingle this explanation
but it's like if you and I
were to sing together, we would be harmonized if we had the same tone or, like, we were on the same
beat together and we were doing the same thing at the same time. Yeah, we should just imagine our
beat, like make it up like a success with IELTS, success with IELD. Should we do that now?
Success with IELTS. Success with IELTS. That's not harmonized at all. So there's an example of
what it doesn't sound like.
Yeah, so we are completely tone deaf.
We're just rubbish at, like, coming up with beats on the ply.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
We can't hold a tune.
So, dear listener, if you are creative and if you can sing well,
please let us know and we can sing the success with all the thing together with you.
You can also say I was really out of tune, right?
so I was really out of tune when I used to sing at school.
So you're in tune when you're doing it right and you're out of tune when you're not doing right
and you're holding a tune when you're continuing to do it right.
I did it at school, so I did singing at school, but I was completely out of tune.
So what do you say? I sang at school. So I'm singing now, but at school in the past I sang.
Yes.
Or what do you say? I used to sing. Or I did the singing.
I did the singing
I did the singing. I did the cooking, I did the singing.
It's more like the singing did me because I was completely rubbish at it.
No, but can you say I did singing?
I did singing, yes.
Not I did the singing.
Maybe if you're in a band, you could say, like, I do the singing, or I do the vocals.
And we talked about vocals, vocal cords.
So vocal cords are strings that vibrate in your throat when air passes through them
and you produce sounds this way.
Ben-9!
Vocal cards is definitely a band nine phrase, for sure.
Yeah, yeah, vocal codes.
And what can you say about this vocal codes?
My vocal codes are not developed, so I can't see well.
The vocal cords don't, like, are just inadequate for singing.
I think, because I used the word range there,
and a range describes, like, how high and how low your voice can go.
So for certain singers, they have, like, a very wide range,
and for others, they have a very narrow range of sounds they can make.
I think that's how it works anyway.
So you can be said to be working on your range if you sing professionally or if you're learning to sing.
Who do you usually sing for?
You can say I prefer to sing for a private audience.
Yes, but that just means not for the public.
Singing is not for public consumption.
Well, especially not mine.
Yeah, so maybe you sing in the shower.
I prefer to sing in the shower on my own for a private audience.
and once I tried karaoke.
Karaoke.
It's a Japanese word, I think, originally.
Yeah, yeah, it is. It is.
And what do you say?
We go to karaoke, we sing karaoke, we do karaoke.
All of them.
But I said I did karaoke.
And again, I didn't do karaoke.
Karaoke did me.
And I did a number on the ears of the people listening to me.
And then Rory made a really funny joke.
He said that my singing sounded like swinging a band.
bag of cats.
Yeah.
Meow!
I don't think that's the exact idiom.
I think it's strangling cats, but in my head I just had this image of these cats going
crazy and that was what I said.
Can you imagine cats going crazy doing this meow-re-re-w in the spring?
And this is how Rory sings.
Like I'm abusing cats.
But Rory can dance.
I cannot dance.
I saw Rory dancing.
He's preaching, you know, he's cool with his mum.
I would point out what Maria is describing is me bobbing back and forth at like two o'clock in the morning in a club in Moscow surrounded by drunk people.
That's not dancing. That's me trying to surf up.
Yeah, only once we did go clubbing with Rory after some shots of juice.
Special juice.
Singing can bring happiness to people.
And Rory said if it's in tune, again, if you are in tune, if the singer is in tune, if the singer is in tune,
and the words are positive, right?
And also you mentioned gospel music.
Here you can give examples of different music.
For example, gospels, sound like this.
Gospel music, it's from the South in America.
It's traditionally sung by African Americans,
although I think really anybody could sing it now.
But it's to do with racial oppression in the South
and other great things like that.
Anyway, moving swiftly on, that's the kind of music.
but when we talked about the words,
we could also talk about the lyrics
because the lyrics were the words to a song.
You can say,
I don't like the sound of my voice.
So the sound of my voice,
and then let alone when I sing.
So let alone.
And also, you know,
and what's more I hate when I sing.
I used to do it in the shower
or I sometimes do it in the shower.
I mean, like, who doesn't?
Well, I don't anymore.
I don't want to frighten the neighbors.
When we talk about kinds of songs,
you can say I prefer something upbeat.
So upbeat is something like, hey, you know, like funny, jolly, bright.
So something like upbeat music.
There's a Scottish one.
Oh, it's Scotland the Brave, of course.
How does it go? How does it go, Rory? Could you sing?
Hark when the night is calling here, here the pipes are calling loudly and proudly calling down through the glen.
I'm not singing the rest of it, but that is Scotland the Brave, which is a candidate for Scotland's national anthem when it becomes independent.
Not if? When?
Sweet.
You see, Rory does have the voice.
I don't have the voice.
I'm reading the lyrics from the song, and I only read, well, like, let's say there's four.
I only read 12 words there.
That's singing.
That's fine.
And the deal is now, what kinds of songs do you usually sing?
Maybe something from Adele or British Spears or the Queen, the Beatles.
What do you prefer?
You have to work at it.
So you have to work at developing singing as a skill.
Is there a difference between working at something and working on something?
Your native speaker, you tell me.
I think so.
I think if you work at something, then it's harder.
If you're working on something, you're still developing it,
but working at something implies more force, in my opinion.
And when opera singers work on their range,
so they work on their vocal cords, right?
How they sound, the...
Oh!
this
we're just throwing around these words now
I have no idea
like we use the words
beat and rhythm
and I don't know the difference
between those things
yeah so if you are a singer
or a professional musician
we are very sorry
we might have misused
some terms and yeah
well you say we
I mean it's really me
I'm making a tall pigsy of this
but just goes to show
you can just throw around these words
just showing that you have a vague idea
of what they mean
they're connected to music and the examiner will be happy.
They're probably not a music teacher.
But you used a good one, violin strings.
Yeah, I screwed up that comparison though,
because I sound like my vocal cords are closer to cheese strings than violin strings,
which doesn't create a great image in your head of what my vocal cords look like.
I should have said dental floss.
And on that note, let's bring this episode to a close.
Don't stop me now.
I'm having such good time.
I'm having a ball.
Thank you very much, Queen, for this song.
That's one of my favorite songs.
The link is going to be in the description, and don't stop me now.
And they use a very nice phrase, we are having a ball.
So to have a ball is to have fun, is to have a good time.
So we hope that you did our dear listener have a ball with us in this episode.
Thank you very much for listening.
We'll see you next time.
Bye.
Rory, do you like singing?
Well, if it's done by professionals like choir singers or opera singers, then I'll listen.
But if we're talking about me, then absolutely not.
I'm completely tone deaf.
Do you often sing?
Not really.
And if I ever do, it will be obvious why.
Because I can't really hold the tune or remember the lyrics, to be honest with you.
We used to do it at school, though, and it was nice when everybody harmonised.
Have you ever learned how?
to sing?
Not that I can recall, but if I had more time in the future for it, then I might.
Oh, well, actually, that's not true.
We did it at school, of course.
Although, to be honest with you, I was always out of tune when I did it by myself.
Who do you want to sing for?
Well, ideally no one.
But if I have to, then I'll be doing it for a private audience and they'll have ear defenders
on.
I did try singing karaoke once, but that didn't end well for anybody.
It sounded like I was so.
bringing a bag of cats around.
Do you think singing can bring happiness to people?
Well, if it's in tune and the words are positive
and it's got like a happy rhythm or beat to it,
something like gospel music, for example.
When do you like to sing?
Well, I won't if I'm the one making that decision.
I don't really like the sound of my own voice in general,
let alone when I sing.
I think I used to sing in the shower,
but obviously no one's able to hear that, are they?
What kinds of songs do you like to sing?
If it's a good day, then it'll be something upbeat.
Well, like rock music, for example.
But if it's not, then something gentle and calm, like, oh, like baroque music, for example.
Is it difficult to sing well?
Well, if we're talking about me, then the answer will be a definite yes.
And probably if we're talking in general as well, I'm singing is a skill and you have to work on it.
I think opera singers spend years working on their range.
Don't they?
Do you want to be a singer?
If there's one thing, I'll never be, it's a singer.
I think my vocal chords are closer to, oh, I don't know,
cheese strings rather than violin strings.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
Maybe they may have a mistake.
For example.
For example.
For example.
For example.
For example.
For example.
