Singing, as a common facial movement second only to talking, can be regarded as a universal language across ethnicities and cultures, plays an important role in emotional communication, art, and entertainment. However, it is often overlooked in the field of audio-driven facial animation due to the lack of singing head datasets and the domain gap between singing and talking in rhythm and amplitude. To this end, we collect a high-quality large-scale singing head dataset, SingingHead, which consists of more than 27 hours of synchronized singing video, 3D facial motion, singing audio, and background music from 76 individuals and 8 types of music. Along with the SingingHead dataset, we argue that 3D and 2D facial animation tasks can be solved together, and propose a unified singing facial animation framework named UniSinger to achieve both singing audio-driven 3D singing head animation and 2D singing portrait video synthesis. Extensive comparative experiments with both SOTA 3D facial animation and 2D portrait animation methods demonstrate the necessity of singing-specific datasets in singing head animation tasks and the promising performance of our unified facial animation framework.