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Towards a Common Terminology to Describe Voice Quality in Western Lyrical Singing: Contribution of a Multidisciplinary Research Group
Henrich N., Bezard P., Expert R., Garnier M., Guerin C., Pillot C., Quattrocchi S., Roubeau B., Terk B.
Journal of interdisciplinary music studies 2, 1&2 (2008) 71-93 - http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00297248
Article in peer-reviewed journal
Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing arts
Engineering Sciences/Acoustics
Physics/Mechanics/Acoustics
Towards a Common Terminology to Describe Voice Quality in Western Lyrical Singing: Contribution of a Multidisciplinary Research Group
Nathalie Henrich () 1, Pascal Bezard 2, Robert Expert 2, Maëva Garnier ( ) 3, Christian Guerin 2, Claire Pillot 4, Sophie Quattrocchi 2, Bernard Roubeau 5, Boris Terk 2
1:  Grenoble Images Parole Signal Automatique (GIPSA-lab)
http://www.gipsa-lab.inpg.fr/
CNRS : UMR5216 – Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble I – Université Pierre-Mendès-France - Grenoble II – Université Stendhal - Grenoble III – Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology
Gipsa-lab - 961 rue de la Houille Blanche - BP 46 - 38402 Grenoble cedex
France
2:  pas d'affiliation
Aucune
France
3:  Institut Jean Le Rond d'Alembert (IJLRA)
http://www.dalembert.upmc.fr/ijlrda/
CNRS : UMR7190 – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
Boite 162 4 place Jussieu 75005 Paris
France
4:  Laboratoire de Phonétique et Phonologie (LPP)
http://ed268.univ-paris3.fr/lpp/
CNRS : UMR7018 – Université Paris III - Sorbonne nouvelle
19 Rue des Bernardins 75005 PARIS
France
5:  Service Oto-Rhino-Laryngologie
Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) – Hôpital Tenon – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
4, rue de la Chine Paris
France
Background in performance. In the field of lyrical singing, an extensive terminology is dedicated to voice quality description. Among the many terms, some are used with consistent meaning by virtually all voice specialists, whereas others, which are more metaphorical or aesthetic, have multiple meanings despite their frequent use. The descriptors used by voice specialists deal not only with perceived sound, but also with the production of sound. Background in acoustics. Acousticians do not have a specific vocabulary for describing vocal sounds. They often make use of terms related to timbre. Many studies conducted on the determination of physical criteria for voice-quality description imply a listening focused on voice spectral content and transient phenomena. Aims. Perception of voice quality is subjective and depends on the listener's own experiences and expectations. However, a consensus on its verbal description can be found, in a similar way that a technical vocabulary exists for wine-tasting. Our aim is to elaborate a common terminology for voice-quality description in voice pedagogy, voice therapy and musical acoustics. Main contribution. This paper presents a three-year study conducted by a research group composed of musical acousticians, speech therapists, singers, singing teachers and choir directors. Three main perceptual angles have been considered: perception of vocal gesture or vocal technique, perception of sound, and perception of performance. The listening sheet related to perception of vocal gesture or vocal technique is presented here, and its relevance is perceptually tested. Descriptive terms and illustrative sound examples are given, which have been selected by their consensuality within the research group. The listening sheet related to perception of sound is also briefly described. Implications. The proposed listening sheets facilitate the perceptual and verbal description of voice quality in singing. They allow the listener to concentrate on a given aspect of voice quality, and provide voice professionals with a consensual terminology for expressing singing voice-quality perception. They may also be used as a tool for vocal pedagogy and aural training.
English
2008-05

Journal of interdisciplinary music studies
international
2008-05
2
1&2
71-93

Voice quality – verbal description – listening training – listening sheet
This paper can be downloaded at http://www.musicstudies.org/Henrich_JIMS_0821205.html - direct link: http://www.musicstudies.org/JIMS2008/articles/Henrich_JIMS_0821205.pdf
Département Parole et Cognition

Groupe Qualité Vocale
Attached file list to this document: 
PDF
Henrich_JIMS_0821205.pdf(3.3 MB)
ANNEX
henrich_listeningsheet.ppt(53.1 MB)
henrich_sounds.rar(5.8 MB)