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Welcome
to Vocal Process eZINE 19.
In this
edition, we reveal our new Autumn/Winter course timetable. Your feedback on the Looking at a Voice
series is included, and Gillyanne discovers the work of the
Northern Ireland Music Therapy Trust. Finally, we have not one
but three articles - Meribeth Bunch Dayme on her Vocal Anatomy
course, Jeremy's 'Have You Tried?' piece for
Classroom Music magazine, and an excerpt from Donna Soto-Morettini's
new Popular Music book. |

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Forthcoming courses
Our Autumn/Winter course timetable has just been published on the
Vocal Process website.
Vocal Process is delighted to announce the only UK dates for Dr
Meribeth Bunch Dayme's comprehensive course, Vocal
Anatomy for Voice Professionals. Both Gillyanne and Jeremy have
benefited from Meribeth's expert knowledge, and can recommend this
course from experience. Here is a short article from Meribeth
telling you more about the course.
The logic and wisdom
of the singer's body
Meribeth Dayme PhD
There
is a fascinating and logical structure to the human body. When you
study the body from this perspective and apply it to singing, you
can begin to understand the logic and eliminate a lot of myths and
fears about the process of singing. Too often we fear the thing we
know the least about, particularly our own bodies. The Vocal Anatomy
course combines, logic, discussion and practical exercises for
regarding the relationship of the body to its structural, muscular,
mental, and energetic systems as they apply to singing and
performance.
Today teachers of singing are caught in a confluence of some old, in
some cases out-dated, teaching methods and the increasing amount of
scientific information about aspects of singing. How are you able to
decide what is useful in your teaching? The mission of the Vocal
Anatomy course is to offer teachers and singers access to
interesting, palatable, scientific information and simple concepts
that influence the body when singing. This will encourage people to
think for themselves rather than simply accept what they read and
hear regarding the function of the voice.
One of the things that surprises people most about the course is the
understanding of exactly where the diaphragm is located, and how it
works. Singers hear about the diaphragm for years in their vocal
studies and manage to develop an imaginative view of it. When they
see the actual anatomical structure placed on a skeletal model, it
can be very eye opening and enlightening. During the course there is
as much three-dimensional illustration as possible. The
illustrations in books are excellent, but do not substitute for
viewing a structure in multi-dimensions. Very few people are able to
translate a flat picture into a special structure in their minds so
that they can understand the function. The emphasis on the course is
on seeing, experiencing, understanding and relatively pain-free
learning.
Meribeth Dayme, PhD
Vocal Anatomy for Voice Professionals will take place on October 21-23
in London.
Click here for more details and to book your place.
NEW Singing and the Actor Training
We have a brand new
Singing and the Actor Training course running in October.
Following public demand, Gillyanne and Jeremy have created a new
three-day intensive based on Gillyanne's groundbreaking
book
and audio
guide. The course will follow the general layout of the book
with additional information, new techniques and opportunities for
questions. Places are going fast, so
click here to download the pdf of the course brochure. The
course runs in London on October 27-29.
You will by now have noticed that these two courses are less than a
week apart. We believe that together these courses are a winning
combination - an excellent grounding in theory and practice for singers and teachers. So for this year only we
are offering a special price for both courses: book a place on Vocal
Anatomy for Voice Professionals and Singing and the
Actor Training and
save
a massive £115 off the total price.
The Autumn/Winter
course schedule
In addition to the two courses described above, the next
Integrated VoiceTM
Module One
begins in October. We still have one place available on the
programme - you can email us for an interview if you are interested
in joining.
The
excellent
Practical
Phonetics course runs in November. Heather Keens will be
taking you through the theory and practicalities of phonetics. The
course is suitable for both beginners and improvers: if you have
never used phonetics before, this is an excellent introduction.
Heather is a highly experienced singer and a graduate of the MA
Voice Studies course at CSSD. She works with phonetics for sung and
spoken voice, and teaches classical, jazz and popular music styles.
November 18, in London.
January 20 2007 sees the next
Computer Voice
Training course. Jeremy's hands-on, intuitive approach to
voice work and computers is enlightening and fun. You may be
surprised to discover what a useful tool the computer can be both
for yourself and for your teaching. There is plenty of time for
practise on this course as we have 3 computers available. Jeremy
also provides software if you want to bring your own lap-top (PC
only).
Belting
Explained arrives in February. We are already taking
bookings for this popular course. If you need to belt and don't know
how, if you need to teach belting and even if you disagree with
belting, you will find this course practical and highly informative.
This course is essential for those performing or teaching in Musical
Theatre, Rock and Pop. February 10 2007, London
Successful Singing Auditions runs on March 03 2007, London
This is a day of intensive training with Jeremy and Gillyanne on the
work described in their book. Auditioning is psychologically
challenging and we work on this course to support and guide you in
finding your best for the next audition. 12 performers places and up
to 20 places for observers if teachers and coaches want to pick our
brains on this subject!
Jenevora Williams joins Vocal Process again for her
The Developing Voice
course. We had great feedback about Jenevora's day last year, with
participants commenting particularly on the quality of sound files,
the extensive course notes and the usefulness of the masterclass
with young singers. If you work with young singers either as a coach
or teacher, this course is a must. March 17 2007, London.
The next Looking at a Voice video ebook...
Many
thanks to all of you who have emailed and telephoned with comments
and praise for the Looking at a Voice series. You all seem to agree
that the series is both fascinating and useful.
"I think it's a brilliant idea and I'm a great admirer of what
you and Gillyanne are doing for voice research." [JH]
"The constriction one especially has been a revelation. To
actually see what the false vocal folds do and how they affect sound
takes retraction from some abstract concept to a physical reality."
[AF]
"The Video Ebooks shock one into accepting at a deep level the
visceral nature of the voice. Superb job, and again an act of real
generosity towards the voice community." [JR]
It was my intention this month to release the fourth in the series,
the long-promised Modal to Falsetto 2 - Breathy Speech.
Although it was sitting on my computer a few days ago, a recent trip
to the computer doctor has meant that I don't currently have access
to the files. I will send you an update as soon as I have news...
In the meanwhile, you can still download the first three in the
series:
Looking at a Voice shows how vocal endoscopy is made,
and guides the viewer through the main structures that can be seen.
Looking at a Voice is an excellent demonstration of a healthy
voice phonating in sung and spoken modes. The UK's first
downloadable endoscopy video ebook is still available on the website
to download for an introductory price of £5, and 50p goes straight
to charity.
Modal to Falsetto 1 - Making the Change contains rare
footage of both male and female falsetto, focussing on flipping
between modal and falsetto sets on the same note. The film contains
both stroboscopic and endoscopic footage, and is now available
exclusively from the Vocal Process website. 75p of each £7.50
video ebook is being donated to the BVA and BAPAM.
Constriction and
Release seems to be the topic
that interests the most people - we have certainly had the largest
number of requests to see this manoeuvre on film.
This video ebook shows clear footage of the false vocal folds moving
independently of the true vocal folds. The ebook also contains some
extraordinary close-up video footage of the true folds being held
together without phonation while the false folds are moved apart and
together.
Downloading is simple and each video ebook is available immediately
after payment. To purchase your copies, click on
this link to go
straight to the special page on the website. Why not join a growing
number of Vocal Process clients and download all three for £20?
An Eclectic Being -
Gillyanne's day with the Northern Ireland Music Therapy Trust
In August Gillyanne was invited to Belfast to train a group of 9
therapists and two managers in a workshop on healthy voice use.
Gillyanne writes:
"Vocal health is a major topic of the day. Mirroring and matching
client vocal patterns is an important part of the work, and these
patterns might include aggressive sounds, pitches out of an
individual therapists' vocal comfort zone and a range of
constrictive vocal behaviours.
We start off with the recoil breath and voiced fricatives to
create those essential 'good vibrations'. I have brought with me a copy of
the Looking at a Voice video ebook. The group are fascinated by
footage of Jeremy's larynx, showing the true and false vocal folds.
Hoarseness and 'frog in the throat' syndrome are on their request
list for the day and everyone feels the benefit from working the
silent laugh and silent breathing exercises. It is too easy when
mirroring client vocal patterns to forget to release the effects of
the 'grunt mechanism' at the end of the day.
A practical approach to vocal warm-ups is discussed. All of the
therapists are peripatetic, so travelling to different venues and
often working with different types of client with differing needs.
Re-setting their voices to a healthy 'neutral' and preparing for the
day's work with a five minute warm-up makes for happier voices and
less illness. The five minute warm-up and reset can easily be done
in the car on the way to work and between venues. If you want to
monitor your abdominal wall, you need one hand off the wheel, so
some exercises (like the recoil breath) requires a stop at the
traffic lights! Others, such as chuckling and giggling can be
done on the road.
During
the afternoon I decide to go 'off the page'. I feel that the group
needs to do something really practical that reflects the way they
might work with their own clients. It is important that participants
can apply what they were learning in a real-life setting, rather
than an idealised one.
Improvisation is a key tool in group work and we end up sitting on
the floor, working through different voiced and invoice fricatives,
making noises like machinery. We then do an improvisation based on
laughter - father Xmas 'Ho-Ho's, silly girl giggles, snide laughs,
sniggers and 'dirty laughs' exploring laughter on different vowels,
pitches and voiced consonants. This is enormously energising!
We
follow on with different types of onset - aspirate and glottal. In
the onset work, sound ranges from very breathy to short sharp,
highly energise attacks using sounds such as 'ouch', 'Oh' and 'Ahhhhhh'.
I remind the group to prepare for the more aggressive sounds by
thinking of the silent laugh and engaging the muscles of the torso
for voice-body connection. The physical mode of 'tantrum' (banging
fists on the floor, on your knees (if sitting cross legged) or
stamping feet and whirling your fists up and down, is very helpful
when making extended screaming or shouting sounds. Frustration and
anger can be issues for clients and an exercises like these might be
helpful in 'letting it out'.
The
group then ask about quiet sounds - how to mirror those without
inducing tension in their own voices. I introduce them to what I am
coming to call 'the mobile phone' exercise, where you imagine a
friend talking to you on the phone (volubly!) and make quiet
intermittent noises of agreement or affirmation 'unh-h'hn'. This is
an excellent way to practice quiet vocalising on a comfortable vocal
pitch. The noises can then be extended into small pitch glides and
eventually into soft moaning and words of complaint - oh dear -
please mum - ohhh.
This has
been
a fascinating day for me, as I have not come into contact with this
client base before. I learned that a Music Therapist must be an
eclectic being - finding ways of vocal and non-vocal communication
to work with a range of emotional, physical and psychological
disorders.
Whether
vocally trained or not, the demands of a Music Therapist's job
places them in the category of 'professional voice user'."
If you are interested in
receiving INSET or training workshops from Gillyanne or Jeremy,
email Gunvor to discuss your requirements.
JF Article Have You Tried?
A few
months ago Jeremy was asked to create an article for Classroom Music
magazine on favourite musicals for secondary schools. Using a
combination of extensive research and his own knowledge in the
field, Jeremy came up with five musicals for music and drama
teachers to consider. Covering more than 250 years and in five
different musical styles, the list included three large ensemble
pieces.
As a
taster, see if you can recognise the musical from this plot
synopsis, taken from the article: "Boy meets girl (after years at
sea with ugly nurse for company) but, being born in a leap year, he
won't complete his apprenticeship for more than 60 years. Currently
working as a pirate, future bride hates piracy."
Classroom Music and Rhinegold Publishing have kindly agreed
to let Vocal Process have a copy of the article for download on the
site. Click here to download the
Have You Tried Musicals pdf
Article: Popular Music
Following
the inclusion of an article from Donna Soto-Morettini in
eZINE
18, here as promised is an excerpt from Donna's new book, Popular
Singing - A Practical Guide to Pop, Jazz, Blues, Rock, Country and
Gospel. In the book Donna analyses a number of classic performances,
using charts and descriptions that are explained throughout the
book. She also includes an exclusive interview with Paul McCartney,
now entering his fifth decade as a professional singer. The
following is taken from Chapter 3 - The Complementary Elements of
Style. The book is accompanied by a free CD of example tracks,
recorded by Donna. We have included the individual track references
here.
DECAY OR TONE RELEASE
There are many kinds of release or decay, but all have to do with
the way in which the singer finishes the sound. Decay suggests a
finish which fades, and release is abrupt.
Vibrato fade
This
is a common decay used by a great majority of singers, regardless of
style. Because, as noted earlier, vibrato speeds and width can vary
enormously, the sounds of vibrato fade decays can also vary. It's
generally a sweet way to finish your sound; it has an artful, 'sung'
quality about it - although combined with other kinds of release it
can have more punch. On the whole, unless the final note is held for
an unnaturally long time at a high effort-level, this release
usually has the same kind of 'neutral' emotional impact as the
Simultaneous onset.
[Listen to CD Example 14: I looked over Jordan and what did I see
Comin' for to carry me home?]
Aspirate decay
Depending on how strongly the singer wants to produce the decay,
this may include a full stiffening of the vocal folds (which means
there is no vibrato to it), or it may just be a very 'airy' sounding
thin-fold tone, which can include vibrato. Most people can master
this finish but it takes some practice to use it artfully. The
emotional effect can be varied - it can lend a kind of gentle or
contemplative mood to a performance, and it often makes the singer
sound as if they are turning the sound (and perhaps the thought) in
on themselves.
[Listen to CD Example 15: Why should I feel discouraged? Why
should the shadows come?]
Falling off the note
This release works just as it sounds: the vocalist bends the note
downwards, as if 'falling off' the phrase. There may or may not be
vibrato. Some singers use the 'fall' with vibrato to ease down to
the next note (think of Judy Garland), so that it has a very
definite place to 'fall' to, which means that it's not really a tone
release in this case. Others just fall nowhere in particular.
There's almost always a fade to it, but sometimes subtle. In harder
Rock sounds (Bruce Springsteen or Chrissie Hynde, for example) the
fall neither fades nor has vibrato. It is a deliberately 'artless'
sound in singing, and its effect is always strong. It might suggest
that the singer's feeling is too strong to be 'sung' about, or that
the singer is more concerned with the overall musical feel of the
piece than with the lead vocal. Emotionally it appeals to our sense
of defiance.
[Listen to CD Example 16: I sing because I'm happy, I sing
because I'm free. His eye is on the sparrow and I know he watches
me]
'Pushed' release
Sort of the opposite of falling off the note. It's rarer than
falling off and is quite distinctive in sound. This is when the
singer actually pushes the note upwards slightly, just before
releasing. You can hear this commonly in singers like Kate Bush,
Dinah Washington or Hank Williams, and the sound can sometimes have
an almost 'flip' quality to it. It creates a high-energy sound and
takes true effort to produce. This release can be both gentle (which
is how you'll her it in the CD example) or extreme - see the
Resources section for suggestions on where to hear the more radical
versions of this release! But whether gentle or extreme, it is
always a playful and sassy sound and is such an unexpected way to
finish a sung phrase that it may make an audience laugh - but that
is usually because it's such a joyful sound. It's a release that has
usually only been used by vocalists who are brave and secure in both
their power and the uniqueness of their style.
[Listen to CD example 17: Oh freedom, oh freedom, oh freedom over
me]
'Compressed' release
Can simply sound as if the singer has stopped the note with no
attempt to soften or ease the finish. This decay is also often
combined with a fast improv fill, or a short, quickened vibrato, but
it still finishes fairly abruptly - in other words, it doesn't fade.
Again, this decay seems to want to defy any 'sweetness' or comfort
in the sung sound. It can make a singer sound angry or defiant, or
(in the case of Peggy Lees' Fever) can sound sophisticated
and cool. Its emotional effect is varied but usually makes the
singer sound strong and in control of their emotion and their sound.
[Listen to CD Example 18: I sing because I'm happy, I sing
because I'm free. His eye is on the sparrow and I know he watches
me]
Gospel release
This decay has a burst of air on the finish. The burst can be subtle
(Michael Jackson, Sarah Vaughan) or quite strong (Jennifer Holliday,
Stevie Wonder). In the case of singers with a very strong Gospel
influence, like Holliday, you may even hear an added syllable on an
'ah' or 'hey' sound. This is often the sound of extreme ecstasy or
pain - as if the song is not enough fully to convey the singer's
feeling, which must overflow into an extra syllable or sound. Like
the pushed release it quickly raises both the true and the perceived
effort-levels and it takes great energy to produce. Not
surprisingly, its emotional effect is inspiring - we feel absolutely
inspired, either by the singer's conviction or by their passion. It
creates a sense of excitement and energy.
[Listen to CD Example 19: If you get to heaven before I do Comin'
for to carry me home]
Creak decay
This sounds exactly like the Creak onset. Many people cannot access
the sound easily, and many have difficulty using it as a 'stand
alone' release of sound. More often it's used to fade the sustain of
one note as the singer 'glides' into the next note. It is very
effective when used. because it can have a defiant, artless quality
about it that suggests a kind of pain which can't be alleviated
through singing - as if the sound must melt back into a kind of
never-ending agony or deep thought. It's a highly vulnerable sound
that creates immediate intimacy between singer and audience.
[Listen to CD Example 20: Oh freedom, oh freedom, oh freedom over
me]
The
chapter continues with discussions on Sustain and vibrato, Phrase
weight and placement, Note attack breath and diction, and
Improvisation.
The book with its free CD of voice demonstrations is published by
A&C Black for £16.99 ISBN 0-7136-7266-8
For more information on the book, visit the
Popular
Singing website.
And finally,
Jeremy's blog
this month contains thoughts about our reliance on technology,
masterclasses, and some extreme changes of a song subtext to suit
the situation. And if you're not sure where the September 8 blog
quote comes from, it's a line from a Joni Mitchell song...
http://www.singingcoach.blogspot.com
 
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