Singing and Communicating in English: A Singer's Guide to English DictionFrom the Foreword by Renee Fleming: "Kathryn LaBouff has developed an approach to singing in the English language which is wonderfully user-friendly, and which has surely saved much wear and tear on my voice. It is a technique that has empowered me with the knowledge and skills to bring a text to life and to be able to negotiate all of the sounds of the language with the least amount of effort. I have found her clever and extremely creative use of substitute consonants or combinations of consonants in creating clear diction utterly delightful because they are surprising and because they work. These techniques have been equally useful when singing in foreign languages. We sopranos are not usually known to have good diction, particularly in our high range. I found that working with Kathryn improved my ability to be understood by an enormous percentile of the audience with much less vocal fatigue than I would have experienced if left to my own devices. I have often told my colleagues enthusiastically of her interesting solutions to the frustrating problems of diction. I am thrilled that her techniques are now in print for all to benefit from them." In Singing and Communicating in English, internationally renowned diction coach Kathryn LaBouff provides singers with an accessible guide to the principles of English diction they need to communicate the text successfully. Her thorough and much sought-after technique clarifies the physiology of speech, emphasizes the studied practice of careful and articulate pronunciation, and focuses on the study of English cadence. Covering aspects of phonetics from vowels to diphthongs to fricatives, the book includes multiple practical exercises in International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) transcriptions, helpful diagrams, and pronunciation drills, each chosen from the most essential English art song and operatic repertoire. In addition to standard American and British English, a variety of regional dialects and accents are covered in depth. A companion website features a full range of vowel/consonant drills, poems read aloud by the author and by theater and voiceover actor John Keating, as well as an exercise answer key, and publishers' lists to help the singer locate a vast array of English language works for performance. This book is an invaluable resource for all vocalists (both professional and aspiring), diction instructors, teachers, and coaches, and choral directors. VISIT THE COMPANION SITE AT www.oup.com/us/singinginenglish |
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Содержание
CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Diction | 3 |
CHAPTER 2 Communicating the Thought | 17 |
CHAPTER 3 Introduction to Vowels | 31 |
CHAPTER 4 The Fronting Vowels | 43 |
CHAPTER 5 The Backing Vowels | 59 |
CHAPTER 6 The Mixed Vowels | 71 |
CHAPTER 7 Diphthongs | 79 |
CHAPTER 8 The Three SemiVowel Glides | 99 |
The Rain in Spain | 207 |
CHAPTER 15 The MidAtlantic Dialect | 241 |
The Finesse Factor | 255 |
APPENDIX 1 The International Phonetic Alphabet for English | 259 |
APPENDIX 2 ThreeDialect Overview | 263 |
APPENDIX 3 Regional Dialects Found in Vocal Repertoire | 265 |
Glossary | 291 |
Music Publishers Guide | 305 |
CHAPTER 9 Introduction to Consonants | 113 |
CHAPTER 10 The Plosives | 119 |
CHAPTER 11 The Fricatives | 141 |
CHAPTER 12 The Nasal Consonants Plus the Lyrical L | 167 |
Connecting the Dots | 185 |
Selected Bibliography and Resources | 309 |
315 | |
319 | |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Singing and Communicating in English: A Singer's Guide to English Diction Kathryn LaBouff Ограниченный просмотр - 2007 |
Singing and Communicating in English: A Singer's Guide to English Diction Kathryn LaBouff Ограниченный просмотр - 2007 |
Singing and Communicating in English: A Singer's Guide to English Diction Kathryn LaBouff Ограниченный просмотр - 2007 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
accents Action American American Standard apply arched articulators Avoid becomes begin breath British chapter characteristic closed clusters consonant Copyright dialects diphthong doubled Drill dropped English EXAMPLES EXERCISES expressive final first following text following words forward fricative front glide glottal hand hard Historic initial language legato lift lips listed listener lower merge Mid-Atlantic mouth Music nasal night North palate Phonetic phrase pitch plosive position Practice primary produced pronounced pronunciation r-colored vowels Received regional relaxed release repertoire rolled rounded RULE schwa shadow singers singing sleep soft song speak speakers specific speech spellings stressed syllable stressed words substitute sung sure sustained syllable symbols technique teeth thought tongue Transcribe the following unstressed upper verb vocal voice vowel sounds