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I've Never Seen Anybody Do the Things You Do Befo[i] : En studie om Cursive Singing / I've Never Seen Anybody Do the Things You Do Befo[i] : A study about Cursive SingingTewolde Berhan, Miriam January 2021 (has links)
Titel: I’ve never seen anybody do the things you do befo[ɪ]: En studie om Cursive Singing. English title: I’ve never seen anybody do the things you do befo[ɪ]: A study about Cursive Singing. This is a critical study about the music industry with focus on the technological aspects of musical trends. The musical trend studied here is a modern singing technique called cursive singing – a phenomenon concerning the pronunciation of the lyrics in contemporary pop music. By looking into three hit songs of the late 2010s in which the singer employs cursive singing, I am aiming to find answers to two questions: Which other musical parameters do these three songs from 2015 to 2019 have in common, and what can they tell us about the mixing process? After answering this question, I am trying to find out whether certain contemporary music production techniques of these three songs could encourage cursive singing, and if so – how? I have employed two methods for analyzing the songs: a multimodal analysis as well as a reenactment of a recording situation. The multimodal analysis is based on the terms and concepts presented in the book Speech, Music, Sound (1999) by multimodalist and linguist Theo van Leeuwen, while the reenactment is an attempt to gain insight in the singing situation of todays recording artists, where the compressor is becoming more and more important in the mixing process, diminishing the dynamics of the recorded song. Through enabling mass production and distribution of music, the music technology has become an essential part of the music industry, while it at the same time is shaping the recorded music.
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THREE ELEMENTARY GENERAL MUSIC TEACHERS’ APPROACHES TO SINGING WITH THEIR STUDENTSMcGaugh, Caitlyn Kugler January 2021 (has links)
Instructional processes comprise three basic components: planning, delivery of instruction, and assessment. Educators frequently reflect on the relationships among those components to choose the most effective approaches to increase student learning. Teachers’ continual assessment of student knowledge and understanding through reliable, valid measures critically propels teachers’ effective instruction forward. Constraints on funding for public education have resulted in larger class sizes and smaller budgets for the arts, as well as a heightened focus on standardized testing, less instructional time, and fewer resources (Slaton, 2012). How, then, are music teachers effectively assessing student achievement while grappling with those challenges? To fill a gap in the research literature, the purpose of this research was to explore singing voice development assessment practices that public-school elementary-general-music teachers use with their students. The following overall question guided this research: What can we learn from three kindergarten through fifth grade general music teachers about their approaches to singing with their students? I sought to document three teachers’ singing voice development processes and assessment techniques. Recognizing that this study took place during the COVID-19 pandemic, I also sought to document participants’ perceptions of the benefits and challenges of the techniques they shared, especially as they grappled with teaching singing in new learning models that were emerging; and adaptations they were using to safely and effectively guide students’ singing voice development—whether they were teaching their students virtually and/or in person.
For this study, I chose symbolic interactionism as a theoretical lens and an interview-only design. Upon approval from Temple University Institutional Review Board, I invited the three participants who consented to engage in three semi-structured individual interview conversations to explore singing voice development assessment techniques, and benefits, challenges, and adaptations of those techniques, especially as they grappled with teaching singing in new instructional models that emerged as a result of COVID-19.
After participants completed member checking of each of their transcripts, I used a content analysis approach to the data to identify emerging codes. Four themes summarized participants’ approaches to singing voice development assessment: teachers rely on their (a) personal philosophy formed from influences and values, (b) planning processes and objectives, (c) interactions with their students through selected techniques and tools, and (d) having time to make necessary adaptations in their singing voice development assessments. The key idea emerging from the study: the three teachers prioritized providing worthwhile musical experiences for their students. They situated singing voice development and assessment as one piece of their broader general music curriculum. A symbolic interactionist lens informed my themes and key idea by placing the context of teachers’ interactions in the forefront, and my understanding of how their experiences have shaped their views.
While findings from this study are not generalizable, readers may find them transferable. Potential applications for other music teachers’ assessment practices include the following six examples: using a variety of tools to model appropriate use of singing voice, implementing pattern instruction to develop and assess singing voice, incorporating opportunities for individual singing, providing students with performance experiences, maintaining consistency in changing instructional models, and focusing on informal assessment through observation and questioning techniques. Future researchers can continue to shed light on how teachers approach singing with their elementary general music students by learning about factors outside of teachers’ instructional processes that impact singing voice development assessment, and how music teachers adapt their processes for singing voice development assessment in emerging instructional models. / Music Education
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Singing With the New Order Amish: How Their Current Musical Practices Reflect Their Culture and HistoryClarkson, Rebecca January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Selected Vocal Exercises and Their Relationship to Specific Laryngeal Conditions: a Description of Seven Case StudiesMathis, Barbara 05 1900 (has links)
Good vocal health is a vital concern for those people who use the voice in a professional capacity, such as teachers, singers, actors, clergymen, and lawyers. Research in the area of vocal health reveals the need to determine if specific exercises are beneficial to the voice and if exercises used to train the singing voice might be beneficial to alleviate pathological and/or dysfunctional voice disorders.
The purpose of this study was to describe the response of a variety of pathological voices to a selected set of singing exercises. Subjects were selected from the private practice of cooperating physicians who felt that the vocal instruction and exercise program might be helpful to the teachers, students, professional "pop" singers, and housewife-singers who were diagnosed to have muscle tension dysphonia, nodules, recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis, or iatrogenic dysphonia.
Instrumentation for assessing conditions before, during, and after exercise included a brief case history, subject interviews, attending physicians' medical charts, flexible fiberoptic video nasolaryngoscopy, video cassette recorder and video tape segments, three physician/observers, and a specific diagnostic procedure which provided a method of assessing organic, functional, and perceptual variables.
For the exercise program the researcher chose seven vocalises from the routine designed by Allan R. Lindquest, whose techniques combined those of the Italian school with those of Swedish studios which produced such singers as Flagstad and Bjoerling. The seven vocalises included a warm up "massage" and exercises for separation and blending of the registers, vowel clarity and modification, tone focus, vocal attack, and flexibility.
Since all the subjects showed improvement after exercise in the vocal conditions observed in this study, these vocalises and technique may be helpful to alleviate pathological conditions and/or dysfunctional behavior in other subjects. The researcher further suggests that the voice profession investigate the efficiency of other techniques, exercises, and musical vocalises which might bring about positive changes in vocal conditions and behavior.
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Guide of the Voice Teacher to Vocal Health for Voice Students: Preventing, Detecting, and Addressing Symptoms.Milo, Sarah Khatcherian 29 September 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Vocal Self-identification, Singing Style, and Singing Range in Relationship to a Measure of Cultural Mistrust in African-American Adolescent FemalesJohnson, Beverly Yvonne 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose was to determine the relationship between high or low cultural mistrust and vocal characteristics in African-American adolescent females. The vocal characteristics were vocal self-identification, singing style, and singing range.
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Sång i grundskolan : En kvalitativ intervjustudie om sång i musikundervisning.Bengmark, Alma, Gyll, Frida January 2022 (has links)
Syftet med detta självständiga arbete är att bidra med kunskap om hur musiklärare konstruerar mening om sång i grundskolan utifrån begreppet gemensam sång. Genom kvalitativa intervjuer med fem musiklärare i grundskolan har material samlats in. Materialet analyserades utifrån ett diskursperspektiv med fokus på mikroorienterade diskurser som framställdes ur olika subjektspositioner som de medverkande musiklärarna antog. Skillnader i diskurserna beror på intresse, musiklärarnas tidigare erfarenheter och vad de anser vara relevant i musikundervisningen. Sång kan vara ett känsligt moment i undervisningen och kräver tid, elevanpassning och en trygg inramning. Vidare diskuteras hur gemensam sång i musikundervisning präglas av elev- och lärarförutsättningar, styrdokument och hur musiklärarna ser på sångens värde i undervisningen.
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Training the Hybrid Singer: Mixed Voice for the Bel Canto and Musical Theatre SingerVala, Matthew 08 1900 (has links)
Voice teachers can train versatile singers by infusing musical theatre technique within bel canto evidence-based pedagogy. Seeing these two genres as possessing similarities instead of as unrelated fields allows teachers to not only match academic knowledge with the current entertainment job market, but most importantly, possess a versatile technique allowing them to train singers to perform fluently in multiple styles: the hybrid singer. An area of confusion in both bel canto and musical theatre training is mixed registration. This dissertation uses historic pedagogical texts and contemporary writings on mixed registration to understand laryngeal and acoustical events of the treble voice. The relationship between the two modes of voice production and musical theatre timbral acoustics ("legit" head voice, traditional belt, contemporary chest-mix, contemporary head-mix) is discussed with applicable tools for voice teachers training versatile singers.
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Il bel canto russo: Incorporating Principles from the Old Italian School of Singing to Russian Lyric Diction Utilizing the Songs of Mikhail Glinka (1804 -1857)McGee, Michael Anthony 08 1900 (has links)
Mikhail Glinka (1804-1857) is widely recognized as a founding father of Russian classical music, but in fact, his music represents a bridge: it establishes a distinctive Slavic sound built on the Italian roots of Glinka's musical inspiration. As a young man, Glinka traveled abroad, which included three years spent in Italy, where he gained extensive exposure to and familiarity with what modern scholarship refers to as the Old Italian School of Singing. This influence makes his songs an ideal introduction to Russian lyric diction while reinforcing the tenets of sound vocalism. This study explores four Glinka melodies: "Doubt ," "To Molly," "The Lark," and "Cavatina." Previously published only in their original keys, the songs are presented here transposed into keys suitable for a young bass and a young baritone singer, with the melody line placed in the bass clef and corresponding IPA transcriptions beneath the original Cyrillic text. Following both an introduction that contextualizes Glinka as a composer enamored of 19th-century Italian opera and a discussion of technical and stylistic aspects regarding the production of sound in that same era, there is a brief examination of Russian lyric diction intended to inspire further study of this unique and rewarding singing language. The study concludes by offering commentary on the application of technical and stylistic aspects of the Old Italian School of Singing to the aforementioned melodies.
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Group singing for couples where one partner has a diagnosis of dementiaUnadkat, Shreena January 2015 (has links)
There is an emerging interest in the literature base around the use of group singing in dementia care. Although studies indicate positive outcomes, limited research has been carried out from a relational perspective. Additionally, theoretical underpinnings of the reported benefits have yet to be explored. This study aims to investigate the key theoretical mechanisms underlying the experience of group singing. Interview data from seventeen couples who sing together in a group is analysed using grounded theory method. Several key aspects of group singing are presented, namely that the positive experience of the act of singing combined with effective group facilitation enables equal participation and a powerful group effect. A further benefit of new learning and creativity is explored. Implications for clinical practice and possible directions for future research are outlined.
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