Definition. Closed mouth — singing with the mouth closed, producing a hummed or muffled tone.
Bocca chiusa, Italian for ‘closed mouth’, is a vocal direction instructing singers to sing with the mouth closed — essentially humming. The result is a muffled, atmospheric tone with a particular timbre quite different from open-mouth singing.
The technique is most associated with operatic and choral writing where composers want a particular tonal color — atmospheric, ghostly, or distant. Puccini’s Madama Butterfly features a famous ‘humming chorus’ (Coro a bocca chiusa) — an entire chorus singing with closed mouths to evoke the dawn after Butterfly’s vigil.
The direction is also used in choral music for color and atmosphere. The technique requires careful breath support and resonance — humming with full vocal commitment, not just lazy lip closure. The tone should be warm and full despite being muffled.
Italian, ‘closed mouth’ — bocca (‘mouth’) + chiusa (‘closed’, past participle of chiudere).
Hum with full vocal support. The mouth is closed, but the tone should still be warm and resonant — not weak or barely audible.
Closed mouth — singing with the mouth closed, producing a hummed or muffled tone.
Italian, ‘closed mouth’ — bocca (‘mouth’) + chiusa (‘closed’, past participle of chiudere).
Hum with full vocal support. The mouth is closed, but the tone should still be warm and resonant — not weak or barely audible.
Related terms include: Sotto Voce, Mezza Voce.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano