Robin de Haas

Robin is co-founder of MDH Breathing Coordination. He is based in Switzerland but travels the world to teach singers, athletes and anyone who wants to improve their lives.

If you think you cannot further improve your breathing and singing, then Robin de Haas takes it to the next level! Helping others drives him. In his search for even better teaching methodologies, he came across Lynn Martin in New York. Lynn knew and worked with Carl Stough and his system for two decades.

Robin knew instinctively he was onto something. The coordination of the breathing muscles involves the whole body. He learned all he could about it and founded MDH (Martin + De Haas) together with Lynn Martin. It is a hands-on system to find and release tensions in the body. And you learn to coordinate the muscles involved in breathing and creating sounds.

Robin worked with famous singers and athletes and helped them improve further. But also with ordinary people to help them get better.

Will you work with him? Will you allow him to share his passion with you and help you?

Connect with Robin de Haas:
The all so important breathing mechanics!

If you are physically restricted from breathing correctly, there is no way past MDH Breathing Coordination! Barbara Tanze learned from Robin de Haas and one of his first students. She can help you as well.
Buteyko breathing is the foundation of healthy everyday breathing. MDH Breathing Coordination helps prepare your body if you have a lot of physical restrictions. So don’t forget to work with Sasha Yakovleva as well.
If you are “normal” but untrained in using your diaphragm, then Nicola Moses can help you a lot to improve.
And the musicians Deanna Swoboda and Ruth Phillips know about positioning your body to allow the ribs to move while holding big instruments.

The path of the voice by Robin de Haas

This book is for anyone using his voice.

We need to move air through our throat to create sounds. So we have to move air into our body first to use it. Our breath and voice cannot be separated. It is crucial to understand the involvement of our whole body. Only then we can begin to learn to control breathing and voice.

Stop to guess and start to learn.

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