ABSTRACT

Voice Studies brings together leading international scholars and practitioners, to re-examine what voice is, what voice does, and what we mean by "voice studies" in the process and experience of performance. This dynamic and interdisciplinary publication draws on a broad range of approaches, from composing and voice teaching through to psychoanalysis and philosophy, including:

    • voice training from the Alexander Technique to practice-as-research;
    • operatic and extended voices in early baroque and contemporary underwater singing;
    • voices across cultures, from site-specific choral performance in Kentish mines and Australian sound art, to the laments of Kraho Indians, Korean pansori and Javanese wayang;
    • voice, embodiment and gender in Robertson’s 1798 production of Phantasmagoria, Cathy Berberian radio show, and Romeo Castellucci’s theatre;
    • perceiving voice as a composer, listener, or as eavesdropper;
    • voice, technology and mobile apps.

With contributions spanning six continents, the volume considers the processes of teaching or writing for voice, the performance of voice in theatre, live art, music, and on recordings, and the experience of voice in acoustic perception and research. It concludes with a multifaceted series of short provocations that simply revisit the core question of the whole volume: what is voice studies?

part I|21 pages

Introducing voice studies

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Voice(s) as a method and an in-between

chapter 1|12 pages

The Re-vocalization of Logos?

Thinking, doing and disseminating voice

part II|53 pages

Voice in training and process

chapter 2|13 pages

The Singularity of Experience in the Voice Studio

A dialogue with Michel Henry 1

chapter 3|11 pages

Learning to let go

Control and freedom in thepassaggio

chapter 4|15 pages

Training Actors' Voices

Towards an intercultural/interdisciplinary approach

chapter 5|12 pages

A Sea of Honey

The speaking voice in the Javanese shadow-puppet theatre

part III|69 pages

Voice in performance

chapter 6|11 pages

Nonsense

Towards a vocal conceptual compass for art

chapter 7|14 pages

Performing theEntre-Deux

The capture of speech in (dis)embodied voices 1

chapter 8|16 pages

Sensing Voice

Materiality and the lived body in singing and listening philosophy

chapter 9|12 pages

Lamenting (With the) “Others,” “Lamenting Our Failure to Lament”?

An auto-ethnographic account of the vocal expression of loss 1

chapter 10|14 pages

Enchanted Voices

Voice in Australian sound art

part IV|54 pages

Voice in experience and documentation

chapter 11|13 pages

“Body Musicality”

The visual, virtual, visceral voice

chapter 12|15 pages

Transcribing Vocality

Voice at the border of music after modernism

chapter 13|11 pages

Strange objects/strange properties

Female audibility and the acoustic stage prop

chapter 14|13 pages

The Eavesdropper

Listening-in and overhearing the voice in performance