A BIG VOICE Pop Choir

A BIG VOICE Pop Choir Tuesdays SING Pop Music HALL HP21 7PS Adults 8-9pm Energise Physically Mentally & Emotionally NO AUDITION or sight reading.

Launched in September 2011, Maria Scobey, Owner and founder of the umbrella company 'A B I G V O I C E' ran her first Karaoke Pop Choir which was an immediate success and has now expanded into both a Youth Karaoke Pop Choir and a Adult Karaoke pop choir. "Singing is a great form of escapism, a fun creative outlet, especially in a group. My sessions alleviate stress with our mindfulness breathin

g techniques, recharges your energy levels and fills your body with HAPPY endorphins! A BIG VOICE not only helps young people and maturer folk develop musically by learning techniques and how to utilise your body to enhance your sound, our sessions also help to boost confidence, break down any inhibitions and connect with other people". We're online during the Covid Pandemic & in person at The Healthy Living Centre Unit 1, Walton Court Centre, Shopping Centre, Hannon Rd, Aylesbury HP21 8TJ
All abilities are welcome. Just an open mind in our non judgemental group. Come and experience our natural high...

🎂🫶🙏Today I've celebrated 20 years in business, setting up 6 different services:*1* A BIG VOICE Singing Tuition *2* A BIG...
06/03/2026

🎂🫶🙏Today I've celebrated 20 years in business, setting up 6 different services:
*1* A BIG VOICE Singing Tuition
*2* A BIG VOICE Children's Party Entertainment
*3* A BIG VOICE Live Music
*4* A BIG VOICE Singing Workshops
🙏T H A N K Y O U🙏 for your continued support🫶
I've met the most incredible people along the way and enjoyed helping hundreds to sing!🙏
👇These two services I did for 14 years as well; I decided to stop all my groups in Dec 2024 to enjoy a bit more free time.
A BIG VOICE Tunes 4 Toddlers
A BIG VOICE Pop Choir
🙏THANK YOU🙏 to everyone who's supported me in my self employed journey and I'm looking forward to this next year of helping people through music and entertainment.

30/12/2025

DO YOU SUFFER FROM PERFORMANCE ANXIETY?

1. Understanding How Anxiety Manifests

Many musicians experience performance anxiety. It can be mild for some, but for others it can be debilitating and manifest into both psychological and physical symptoms – e.g. shaking, a dry mouth, racing heart – can profoundly affect the ability to play or sing. Anxiety can also manifest psychologically, e.g. racing thoughts or making it difficult to focus. Depending on how your body reacts, these responses can affect your ability to carry out the fine and precise tasks needed to perform.

Performance anxiety has little to do with a musician’s ability or talent. Many eminent musicians have suffered from debilitating performance anxiety. Musicians might form negative ideas about themselves when experiencing performance anxiety, so it is important to understand it from a compassionate perspective, away from harsh judgement.

Definitions
Anxiety is when someone feels worried, fearful or uneasy, experienced through thoughts, emotions and physical symptoms. It is your body’s natural response to a threat or stress, but when it is out of a comfortable range it can start interfering with everyday life. It can be mild or severe, grow gradually over time, or hit more instantly, presenting like a panic attack.
Panic is characterised by a sudden onset of intense and overwhelming feelings of fear, where our body’s normal response to stress or a threat is exaggerated.
Symptoms
Symptoms of anxiety and panic include:

feeling nervous, restless or tense
a sense of dread or impending danger
increased heart rate
breathing rapidly (hyperventilation)
sweating
trembling
dry mouth
sweating or chills
feeling weak, tired or dizzy
difficulty concentrating or thinking about anything other than the present worry
trouble sleeping
gastrointestinal problems
Experiencing any of these symptoms while trying to perform is challenging, unpleasant, and likely to detract from performing at your best. Some musicians may face particularly acute challenges around some of these symptoms, for example when a wind player experiences a dry mouth or a string player experiences shaking.

Threat
Musicians are exposed to many unique situations and pressures, which are perceived as threats:

feeling of being judged
fear of symptoms triggered by anxiety or panic (listed above)
fear of going wrong
difficulty focusing
fear of not playing well enough
fear of negative outcome (not winning a competition, not doing well in an audition)
fear of the unknown
memory lapses
developing anticipatory fear of the worry itself
In response to threat, musicians may experience automatic and instant responses such as dread, panic and fear. This is often felt physically as a knot in the stomach, an upset stomach, rapid breathing, racing thoughts or feelings of being unable to cope.

Another response to threat is to enter fight or flight mode, where the body releases hormones either to fight the perceived threat or run from it. If your body triggers fight or flight in non-life-threatening situations, you may react in unnecessarily heightened ways.

Cycle of anxiety
When responding to threat, you may enter a vicious cycle of anxiety.

A blue cycle diagram, showing threat, reaction and consequence as all connected as part of this cycle.

Threat: The threat appears and an automatic thought occurs, for example: “What if I make a mistake in the concert?”
Reaction: You respond, e.g. by tensing up, panicking, shaking or having racing thoughts.
Consequence: You are gripped by anxiety, affecting your ability to focus. Preparation for your concert deteriorates, and instead you are distracted and consumed by anxiety. This then increases the perception of threat, and the cycle continues.
Once you experience this cycle a few times, you start to learn this response, and it becomes expected and ingrained. Without effective tools to respond to anxiety, it is hard to break this cycle, thereby reinforcing it.

To stop the cycle from sn*******ng you must intervene. The best time to intervene is during the reaction phase, when you have the most control, giving you a better chance of breaking the cycle.

To understand how best to put in place the most appropriate interventions, it is important to look first at the root causes of performance anxiety. look out for A BIG VOICE Live Music SOLUTIONS on here over the next few days ...

A BIG VOICE Live Music A BIG VOICE Singing Tuition .co.uk A BIG VOICE Singing Workshops

Doing my thang, Singing in Africa 🌍 🎶
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Doing my thang, Singing in Africa 🌍 🎶

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Still doing my thing but in Africa
🎤🎶 🎙.🎶

So much fun. 50th Pub Pop Choir. A BIG VOICE Singing Workshops A BIG VOICE Singing Tuition A BIG VOICE Live Music 🎶 .co....
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  for another     Come   to   with .co.ukA BIG VOICE Pop Choir A BIG VOICE Singing Tuition A BIG VOICE Live Music
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for another Come to with .co.uk
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Which muscle groups are responsible for aiding the suction behind inhalation and the squeeze of exhalation as well as ho...
25/09/2024

Which muscle groups are responsible for aiding the suction behind inhalation and the squeeze of exhalation as well as holding air still inside lungs? 🫁
1.?
2.?
3.?

Why is it advantageous to breath in via our nose when singing?
1.

How do we sustain longer notes when singing?
1.
2.
3.
Comment below:

Address

Aylesbury
HP217

Opening Hours

Tuesday 7pm - 8pm
8pm - 9pm
Wednesday 7:30pm - 8:30pm

Telephone

+447708040011

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