S C R E A M

At a concert, a sporting event, or a wedding, people with joy. Interestingly, the brain processes joyful screams and fearful screams in the same amygdala region. Your body doesn't know the difference between terror and excitement; it just knows intensity .

From Bruce Dickinson to Chester Bennington, the musical is a controlled explosion. Unlike the alarm, this s c r e a m has rhythm and pitch. It is the sound of repressed emotion—anger, grief, or ecstasy—being molded into art. Vocalists train for years to achieve a "fry scream" (distortion from the false cords) or a "false chord scream" (lower, guttural power). Done wrong, it destroys your voice. Done right, it saves your soul. s c r e a m

If your s c r e a m hurts, you are doing it wrong. Pain indicates you are using your true vocal cords like sandpaper. Stop immediately. At a concert, a sporting event, or a

We are screaming more than ever, but rarely with our voices. From Bruce Dickinson to Chester Bennington, the musical