Back Breathing: A Tutorial

This is the final article in the series about breath. The other two articles are here and here. This is a very advanced breathing technique. It creates the most amount of resonance possible in the body, therefore making your sound better. It also increases the amount of air available to you.

How Do You Back Breathe?

Fill up your lungs to about 80% full. When you breathe out, keep your rib cage expanded. This will create a reserve of air that you try not to use. Try to keep your stomach muscles as relaxed as possible.

You know you’re doing it right when you bend over and feel your lower back expanding and contracting with your breath.

While exhaling, if you need to use the reserve air because it’s a particularly long passage, feel free to use it. Try not to use the reserve for every breath.

What If I Can’t Get It?

I learned this technique through reading a book. It said, “If you don’t understand how to do it from my description, talk to a singer.” That’s a common phrase when you read flute literature.

When I talked to a singer, she said to imagine the bottom half of your rib cage as a barrel that you’re holding around your midsection. It’s as full as you can get it and you shouldn’t let the barrel collapse.

An Odd Way to Practice Back Breathing

This breathing technique is hard until you get the hang of it. I practiced it while I was driving, doing tone work, etc, but I was holding too much tension in my shoulders and my stomach.

Enter marathon training. I tried breathing in this way while I was running and it worked! I was able to keep everything relaxed (because a 10-mile training run is exhausting) and my pace increased by a minute per mile! This was because I was using so much more air.

I was able to incorporate this kind of breathing into my flute practice within a week after my breakthrough while running.

How Should I Use Back Breathing?

You need to master the first two breathing methods first. After that, this should be your primary way of breathing while playing the flute. You can incorporate J breathing into back breathing if you wish – meaning, do both at the same time.

This form of breathing gives your sound more resonance because you’re allowing enough space for the organs in your rib cage to have a deeper vibration than normal.

Another plus is it helps you play longer without taking a breath.

Conclusion

Please don’t attempt this form of breathing until you’re fluent in belly breathing and J breathing. I didn’t learn it until after college, myself, but I could conceivably see someone learning it towards the end of high school at the earliest.

This form of breathing is very advanced, so don’t be upset if you don’t get it right away. It took me a whole year to figure it out.

When you do figure out how to back breathe, your sound will be better and you’ll be able to play longer between breaths. What’s not to love about that?

First Lesson on Breath

Belly breathing is the bread and butter of our breathing techniques. Here’s a different way of learning it than normal.

Flutes use more air than the tuba. By air, I mean volume of air, not back-pressure. Oboes take the cake on back-pressure.

Flutes waste 60% of our air in order to make a sound. Because we have to waste 60% of our air, we have to figure out different ways to breathe so that we can play longer than one note at a time.

Note: this is not the traditional way to teach belly breathing. I have found over the years that this one works better.

Breathe Out

Pull in your stomach muscles as much as you can while breathing out. Breathe out until you don’t think more air is possible to come out. Your abs should be burning.

Breathe In

Let go of your stomach muscles. Your belly will get big as your lungs fill with air.

The Second Breath

In the second breath out, your abs shouldn’t burn, but you should feel your stomach muscles pull in. Breathing in will be less of a shock.

What’s happening

When you pull in your stomach muscles to breathe out, you’re using your visceral mass (organs and intestines in your belly) to push on the bottom of your diaphragm, helping it to force the air out of your lungs.

When you expand your belly to bring the air in, you’re making the air go faster than normal, all the way down to the bottom of your lungs. It’s almost like a vacuum effect.

Check Yourself in the Mirror

Stand to the side in a mirror and put your hands on your belly. You should see your belly going in and out quite a bit. If you’re just learning how to do this, it’s a good idea to begin your practice with this exercise of watching yourself in the mirror.

Belly Breathing

The process described above is called belly breathing. It’s considered one of the more effective ways to breathe. You’ll use this for the rest of your life as a musician.

Singers

I have read in a lot of flute literature that if you don’t understand something about breathing, talk to a singer. They’re a great resource for learning about breath.

James Galway used to talk to singers about breath, vibrato, and tone. I love talking to musicians about the different ways they learn things. More on that here.

Don’t Do The Things on the List Below.

Here are some things you shouldn’t do with the belly breathing

  1. Don’t bring your shoulders up when you’re breathing in. It creates extra pressure on your throat, does nothing for your amount of breath, and makes your body think it should only use the top 10% of your lung rather than the whole lung.
  2. Don’t fill up higher than 80%. The most you should feel full of air is to the height of your armpits. If you fill your lungs further than that, you put extra pressure on your vocal chords and might have bad tone for the first few notes. After a few years, you can practice getting good tone after filling up to 100%, but it takes a lot of work.
  3. When breathing out, don’t allow your chest to go down before your belly goes in. You’ll get a lot more playing time if you do it in that order than in the reverse.

Conclusion

Belly breathing is the bread and butter of our breathing techniques. It becomes automatic after a year or two and will serve you well in other things besides just music. More on that here.

There are two more breathing techniques, which will each come up in their own article.