Exploring the vocal transition from lyric baritone to spinto tenor through action and performative research
Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore the journey I undertook while changing from baritone to
spinto tenor. Before this study commenced, I had been trained as a baritone but several vocal
coaches and teachers addressed the possibility that I might be a tenor. We ascertained that this
incorrect voice classification was the consequence of an incorrectly manufactured timbre in my
voice as well as my phonating with excessive vocal weight. In order to diagnose the factors which
contributed to this manufactured timbre/chiaroscuro, excessive vocal weight and ultimately my
incorrect voice classification, I used Technical Action Research (TAR) to remedy these faults.
Following the principles of TAR , I commenced this study with six preparatory and reflective Action
Research cycles, used to gather data, which allowed me to reflect upon my singing lessons and
prepare for future lessons while addressing the vocal faults which emerged during those lessons.
As a result of the data from the TAR, fifteen technical, pedagogical principles emerged, which I
then used to inform my own singing, specifically the learning of three new operatic roles.
What makes this investigation unique is that it is the first study to my knowledge which employs
TAR with another methodology in research pertaining to vocal pedagogy and performance
practice. In order to inform the learning of three new operatic roles, I employed Performative
Research (PR) 1 as a second method. Through PR I was able to apply the vocal principles which
emerged from the TAR to my singing while studying these roles. These roles included Erik from
Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer, White Man from Van Dijk’s Mandela Trilogy, and The First
Armoured Man from Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. PR enabled me to reflect on notes I made in my
vocal scores and to reflect upon audio/video recordings of my performances of these three
operas. In doing so I was able to provide an overview of the way in which I approached these
roles while changing from baritone to tenor and applying the technical principles which emerged
from the research data.
This study begins with a discussion on the German Fach System in order to place myself more
precisely within this classification system. This study confirmed that I was singing with an overdarkened
sound quality and excessive weight in my vocal production, and it also documented the
way in which I remedied the situation. The combination of these two elements ultimately led to an
unauthentic singing sound, resulting in an incorrect voice type classification. The data which
emerged indicated that an enlarged pharyngeal cavity, combined with correct support, the release
of tension in the articulators, and the use of head-voice integration exercises, could assist singers
in overcoming vocal issues pertaining to chiaroscuro balance and vocal weight management
during their voice type transitioning journey. This dissertation also provides valuable information
to tenors wishing to study the aforementioned roles concerning the possible technical pitfalls
which these roles might present.
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- Humanities [2697]
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