What happens above the open mouth AH position? As the singer opens
the mouth wider with the rising pitch, a switch from full vocal track
resonance, (which the singer was doing up to “the break”) into a new
adjustment, mixing the harmonics and switching to mouth resonance alone,
creating a new tube or container with a different size, and thus, a
different resonant pitch than was had with the full vocal tract. (closing
off the nasal passages and tapping on the cheek the same way the throat
was tapped to get the full vocal tract resonance, we now get a resonant
pitch approximately a fourth above the full vocal tract resonance. This
causes overtones of one (the full vocal tract) and two (the mouth
resonance) to switch, causing the effect many people call
"covering" to occur. Look at it this way: if F4 is wide open
mouthed, the same F4 in mouth resonance alone becomes it the OH shape of
middle C (C4). Try it out! Sing a nice F4 (if you're a guy - if a gal, it
would be F5) Find the resonant position by doing the tapping exercise -
mouth in AH position: vocal cords closed: tap on larynx: then sing the
pitch you hear when tapping (an octave higher for ladies). Your mouth
should have been open wide (just a little wide). Now find the same pitch
you tapped and sang, but now tap on your cheek (having closed off your
nasal passages by raising and locking the soft palate. In order to get the
same pitch, you had to make an OO shape! Now sing the F4 with the new OO
shape. It might be easier, and it will sound "darker" or richer.
Had this switch been some other interval I would never have
discovered this trick of the passaggio - an harmonic switch which
corresponds with the harmonic series, and gives the tone the rounder sound
we expect when a hearing a classical singer.