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Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches

The modern operatic tenor, with his chest-voice-like upper register, produces a vastly different sound to that of the castrato-trained tenore di grazia of the eighteenth century. Notwithstanding this change in tenor vocality, the practice of register-blending or -unification, originally developed by...

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Main Author: Swan, Arthur
Other Authors: Hofmeyr, Hendrik
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: College of Music 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Swan, Arthur
author2 Hofmeyr, Hendrik
author_browse Hofmeyr, Hendrik
Swan, Arthur
author_facet Hofmeyr, Hendrik
Swan, Arthur
author_sort Swan, Arthur
collection Thesis
description The modern operatic tenor, with his chest-voice-like upper register, produces a vastly different sound to that of the castrato-trained tenore di grazia of the eighteenth century. Notwithstanding this change in tenor vocality, the practice of register-blending or -unification, originally developed by the castrati as a means of extending their voices upwards with a seamless transition to the falsetto register, has remained a core element of classical voice training. The change in tenor vocality did, however, provide an impetus for the evolution of this pedagogical practice during the nineteenth century. It led to the emergence of “mixed voice” as the purported mechanism for the tenor's upper register, and the introduction of a more mechanistic approach to register-blending or -unification as a means of developing the mixed voice source mechanism. In light of more recent discoveries in voice science, the validity of the registerblending or -unification approach has been called into question. An important, albeit minority, view is that the tenor's legitimate head voice is simply an upwards extension of his chest voice mechanism. Science has not found any evidence of a “mixed voice” laryngeal mechanism, while there is evidence suggesting that it is possible to extend the chest voice mechanism upwards through vocal training that strengthens the thyroarytenoid muscle, coupled with the development of the necessary fine motor skill to maintain balanced adduction of the top and bottom edges of the vocal folds at high pitches. If this view is correct, it would have important implications for tenor training methods, in particular the practice of register-blending or -unification in the mechanistic sense.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:50.328Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36168 Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches Swan, Arthur Hofmeyr, Hendrik Vanlierde, Martin Music The modern operatic tenor, with his chest-voice-like upper register, produces a vastly different sound to that of the castrato-trained tenore di grazia of the eighteenth century. Notwithstanding this change in tenor vocality, the practice of register-blending or -unification, originally developed by the castrati as a means of extending their voices upwards with a seamless transition to the falsetto register, has remained a core element of classical voice training. The change in tenor vocality did, however, provide an impetus for the evolution of this pedagogical practice during the nineteenth century. It led to the emergence of “mixed voice” as the purported mechanism for the tenor's upper register, and the introduction of a more mechanistic approach to register-blending or -unification as a means of developing the mixed voice source mechanism. In light of more recent discoveries in voice science, the validity of the registerblending or -unification approach has been called into question. An important, albeit minority, view is that the tenor's legitimate head voice is simply an upwards extension of his chest voice mechanism. Science has not found any evidence of a “mixed voice” laryngeal mechanism, while there is evidence suggesting that it is possible to extend the chest voice mechanism upwards through vocal training that strengthens the thyroarytenoid muscle, coupled with the development of the necessary fine motor skill to maintain balanced adduction of the top and bottom edges of the vocal folds at high pitches. If this view is correct, it would have important implications for tenor training methods, in particular the practice of register-blending or -unification in the mechanistic sense. 2022-03-17T10:47:08Z 2022-03-17T10:47:08Z 2021 2022-03-16T09:47:00Z Master Thesis Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36168 eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Music
Swan, Arthur
Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
title_full Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
title_fullStr Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
title_short Understanding the operatic tenor's legitimate head voice: A comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
title_sort understanding the operatic tenor s legitimate head voice a comparative study of historical and modern pedagogical approaches
topic Music
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36168
work_keys_str_mv AT swanarthur understandingtheoperatictenorslegitimateheadvoiceacomparativestudyofhistoricalandmodernpedagogicalapproaches