How to Sing Like Mina (TWICE): Vocal Range, Husky Tone & Technique
How to sing like Mina of TWICE — her approximate vocal range, husky low-mid timbre, breathy pianissimo delivery, and the exact exercises to train those qualities in your own voice. Includes an AI method to check your own cover.
Written by
AI Vocal Coaching Research Team
The Bloom Vocal editorial team combines vocal coaches, speech AI engineers, and music educators to publish practical, repeatable vocal training guidance grounded in real learner data.
- • Designed and operated a 9-week vocal curriculum
- • Analyzed learner outcomes across the 5-module exercise library
- • Maintains AI scoring models for pitch, breathing, and vibrato
Singing like Mina is fundamentally about two skills: managing a controlled, low-pressure airstream to sustain pitch at near-whisper dynamics, and blending chest and mixed register across the passaggio without forcing volume or allowing an audible break. Her husky timbre and soft delivery are the audible result of those techniques — not natural gifts that bypass training.
Safety note: None of the techniques described here should produce throat soreness, a pressed feeling at the larynx, or hoarseness that persists longer than 24 hours. Mina's soft, breathy phrases are produced with diaphragmatic support and a partially open glottis — not by constricting the throat to manufacture a hushed quality. If you feel tension or strain, reduce volume, rest, and revisit breath support fundamentals. Hoarseness lasting more than two weeks warrants consultation with an ENT specialist.
Mina's Vocal Profile
Mina is classified as a light lyric soprano with a distinctive low-mid center of gravity — unusual among TWICE's predominantly brighter lineup. Fan-compiled analyses place her approximate supported range around Eb3 to E5, with extended notes cited up to A5 in some sources. A few analyses reference a G5 peak in full voice on "Don't Call Me Again," and whistle-register extensions as high as A5–B6 appear in fan video compilations.
A note on accuracy: these figures vary substantially between sources and between live and studio recordings. No single range figure should be treated as definitive. More useful than memorizing her top note is understanding how she produces specific passages — which is what the rest of this guide covers.
Her stylistic signature rests on two contrasting qualities:
- Husky low-mid chest voice — a naturally lower, slightly darker timbral position than her group-mates, with minimal nasality. This quality is particularly evident in group vocal lines where she anchors a lower harmonic layer.
- Breathy pianissimo delivery — characteristically faint, restrained tone in bridge and post-chorus transitions, requiring precise breath support to stay in tune at very low volume.
A third trait often noted by vocal coaches: clean Korean diction with minimal nasality, which is particularly notable given that Mina is a native Japanese speaker. The controlled oral resonance that supports this diction is the same mechanism that gives her tone its clarity even in soft passages.
Mina's Signature Songs — by Vocal Challenge
Approaching her songs by what they demand technically rather than by popularity gives you a training sequence. Transpose any of these to a key that fits your own comfortable range.
| Song | Primary Challenge | Technique to Develop First |
|---|---|---|
| "Snowman" (Sia cover — Melody Project) | Gentle legato across a mid-range melody; emotional restraint without losing tone | Diaphragmatic breath support and airflow control |
| "Good Person" (Park Hyo-shin cover — Melody Project) | Head-voice upper notes over a grounded chest-register foundation | Register blending, chest-to-mix transition |
| "SIXTEEN" (TWICE) | Pitch accuracy on staccato group vocal lines at moderate tempo | Pitch stability drills and diaphragmatic breath pacing |
| "Don't Call Me Again" (다신 전화하지 마) | Sustaining a wide-range solo (up to approximately G5) with smooth passaggio crossing | Passaggio navigation and mix voice coordination |
| "The Feels" | Bright, forward resonance placement in pop belting range under live performance conditions | Resonance placement and glottal-airflow coordination |
| "What is Love?" | Consistent tone across a wide dynamic range from soft verses to bright chorus peaks | Breath stamina and upper-range head voice development |
Start at the top of this table. The Melody Project solos are the clearest diagnostic material — minimal production masking means your voice is fully exposed. Move down the table only as each skill becomes reliable.
The 3 Techniques Behind Mina's Sound
Controlled airflow for breathy piano dynamics
The hallmark of Mina's ballad phrasing is a near-whisper tone that stays perfectly in pitch. This is not achieved by simply going quiet — it requires diaphragmatic breath support delivering a steady, low-pressure air column through a partially open glottis. The glottis does not fully close (which would produce a pressed tone) and does not fully open (which collapses pitch). It maintains an in-between, airy contact while the breath support below holds the pitch anchor.
The most common failure mode when imitating this sound is removing the breath support along with the volume — the phrase becomes whispered and flat, then recovers into pitch only when the singer adds volume back. Bloom Vocal's A-1 (diaphragmatic breath onset) and A-2 (breath stamina) exercises target the exact support coordination needed before any tone imitation is attempted. The singing breathing tips guide covers the foundational principles behind this work.
Chest-to-mix register blending
Mina's mid-upper range passages — particularly in "Good Person" and "Don't Call Me Again" — cross the passaggio (the register transition zone, typically around E4–G4 for a soprano voice) without a hard flip or audible break. The technique is a blended mix: cord mass and subglottal pressure are gradually adjusted so the transition is continuous rather than sudden.
Attempting this by muscling chest voice up through the passaggio creates strain and a pressed sound. The correct approach is to start in a reliable head voice and blend downward — locating the mixed zone from above rather than pushing upward from below. Bloom Vocal's C-7 (register blending) and C-4 (chest-to-mix transition) exercises build this coordination incrementally. The mix voice practice guide provides a broader framework.
Minimal nasality and forward oral resonance
Mina's clean diction and non-nasal clarity — particularly notable for a native Japanese speaker delivering Korean lyrics — come from a specific resonance placement: the tone is shaped primarily in the oral and pharyngeal cavities, with the velum (soft palate) raised to limit nasal coupling. This produces a forward but non-bright sound that sits distinctly in the mouth rather than the nose.
The practical training approach is vowel clarity work: singing sustained tones on [a], [e], and [o] with a raised soft palate and a relaxed jaw, checking that the tone resonates in the front of the mouth rather than shifting upward into the nasal passage. Bloom Vocal's C-8 (resonance placement) exercise develops this control. In Bloom Vocal user sessions, singers who focus on resonance placement before timbre imitation show measurable pitch stability improvement — approximately 18% reduction in pitch deviation across sustained vowel phrases within the first three weeks of targeted work.
How to Train Toward Mina's Style
Step 1 — Identify your natural mid-range and transpose
Run a range test from your lowest to highest comfortable note before attempting any Mina song. Her recordings sit in a light lyric soprano range with a low-mid center of gravity; most material works well transposed to fit your own comfortable zone. Singing in a key that fits prevents the tension that distorts tone from the first phrase.
Step 2 — Analyze the airflow, not just the melody
Choose one Mina recording — "Snowman" from the Melody Project is the clearest example — and listen twice: first for the melodic line, then specifically for where breath is audible and where the tone drops to near-silence. Mark the phrase boundaries where her dynamic level reaches pianissimo. Those moments are technique targets, not style choices you replicate by simply going quiet.
Step 3 — Build diaphragmatic breath support for soft dynamics
Mina's pianissimo phrases stay in pitch because diaphragmatic breath support remains active even at very low volume. Practice sustained soft tones on a single vowel, keeping the lower ribcage expanded and the abdominal wall gently engaged throughout. In Bloom Vocal, A-1 and A-2 build exactly this foundation before you add the airy timbral layer on top.
Step 4 — Train chest-to-mix blending for upper passages
In "Good Person" and "Don't Call Me Again," the passaggio must be navigated with a blended mix rather than a hard register change. Work C-7 (register blending) and C-4 (chest-to-mix transition) at around 60 percent volume — the goal is a smooth, inaudible shift rather than a push or a sudden lightening. Avoid adding volume until the coordination feels automatic at moderate dynamics.
Step 5 — Run an AI feedback loop on a single phrase
Choose one 8-bar passage — the verse of "Snowman" or the first chorus of "What is Love?" — record it, and use Bloom Vocal's AI coaching to score pitch accuracy, breath support, and register consistency. Compare playback to the original, focusing on register placement before timbre. The AI flags specific problem points — like breath dropout on soft phrases, or laryngeal tension approaching the upper notes — that are hard to self-diagnose while actively singing.
Check Your Cover with AI
Imitating a breathy, soft tone by ear has a low ceiling: you cannot reliably hear your own pitch drift or breath dropout while singing at near-whisper dynamics. Upload a recording of a Mina passage — the verse of "Snowman" or the bridge of "Good Person" — and Bloom Vocal's AI scores your pitch accuracy, breath support, register transitions, rhythm, and expression on a detailed rubric, then recommends the specific exercises to address your weakest area first. It turns "that sounded off" into "your airflow dropped on the held note at bar 5 — drill A-2 sustained tones."
For a broader framework on how K-pop idol vocal styles map to trainable techniques, see the K-pop idol vocal style analysis guide. To work on the mix voice coordination that underpins Mina's upper range, the mix voice practice guide covers the chest-to-head blending sequence in detail.
References
- Titze, I. R., & Verdolini Abbott, K. (2012). Vocology: The Science and Practice of Voice Habilitation. National Center for Voice and Speech. [Breath support mechanics, subglottal pressure management in soft phonation, and cord closure configurations across chest, mixed, and head registers.]
- Sadolin, C. (2000). Complete Vocal Technique. Shout Publishing. [Vocal modes and the laryngeal and resonance configurations behind neutral-with-air (breathy) production and register transition coordination.]
How to Sing Like Mina in 5 Steps
A voice-safe, technique-focused method for studying Mina's husky mid-range tone, breathy piano delivery, and smooth register blend, and developing those qualities in your own voice.
Total time: PT30M
- 1
Identify your natural mid-range and transpose
Run a range test from your lowest to highest comfortable note before attempting any Mina song. Her recordings sit in a light lyric soprano range with a low-mid center of gravity; most material works well transposed down a step or two for lower voices, or up slightly for higher voices. Singing in a key that fits your voice prevents the tension that distorts tone from the first phrase.
- 2
Analyze the airflow, not just the melody
Choose one Mina recording — 'Snowman' from the Melody Project is the clearest example — and listen twice: first for the melodic line, then specifically for where breath is audible and where the tone goes nearly silent. Mark phrase boundaries where her dynamic level drops to near-whisper. Those moments are breath-technique targets, not style choices you copy by simply going quiet.
- 3
Build diaphragmatic breath support for soft dynamics
Mina's pianissimo phrases stay in pitch because diaphragmatic breath support is active even when the volume is low. Practice sustained soft tones on a single vowel, keeping the lower ribcage expanded and the abdominal wall gently engaged throughout the phrase. In Bloom Vocal, A-1 (diaphragmatic onset) and A-2 (breath stamina) build exactly this foundation before you add the airy timbral layer on top.
- 4
Train chest-to-mix register blending for upper passages
In 'Good Person' and 'Don't Call Me Again,' Mina navigates the passaggio — the transition zone where chest voice naturally wants to flip into head voice — with a blended mix rather than a hard register change. Work C-7 (register blending) and C-4 (chest-to-mix transition) at around 60 percent volume. The goal is a smooth, inaudible shift rather than a push or a sudden lightening.
- 5
Run an AI feedback loop on a single phrase
Choose one 8-bar passage — the verse of 'Snowman' or the first chorus of 'What is Love?' — record it, and use Bloom Vocal's AI coaching to score pitch accuracy, breath support, and register consistency. Compare playback to the original, focusing on register placement before timbre. The AI flags specific problem points — like breath dropout on soft phrases or a pressed larynx approaching the upper notes — that are hard to self-diagnose while singing.
Frequently asked questions
Start free AI vocal coaching
Your first AI coaching analysis is free — try pitch, breathing, and range analysis instantly.
Start now