Extending Vocal Pedagogy: Extended Vocal Techniques in North American Post-Secondary Music Education

Author(s):  
Vanessa Romao

In North America, post-secondary music education is heavily focused on (and limited to) the repertoire and techniques of the Western Art Music canon. Vocal training at these institutions is no exception: vocalists are trained in the bel canto technique whose lineage reaches back to seventeenth-century Italy. This conservatory-based curriculum supports a categorical vocal pedagogy, one that seeks to produce a particular type of singer with a very specific kind of sound. Instead of embracing what each individual singer is capable of, this model focuses on what singers should be capable of from the perspective of repertoire and technical mastery in the operatic tradition. In this paper I will argue that this model risks our losing sight of what the singer has to say in favour of what the composer has to say. Recently there has been discussion and research around a more inclusionary model of vocal pedagogy that would incorporate other techniques alongside bel canto. However, these discussions have been focused on inclusion of musical theatre and belt techniques, with very little discourse on the inclusion of extended vocal techniques. By drawing on the scholarly discourse on the limits and extensions of technical training in post-secondary vocal performance, as well as interviews with several women working in the performance and teaching of extended vocal techniques in Canada, I will explore the potential for extended vocal techniques to contribute to a more inclusive model of vocal pedagogy.

2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-90
Author(s):  
Wayne D. Bowman

This essay questions the efficacy of conventional disciplinary boundaries in post-secondary music studies, boundaries that reductively define music education as a training ground for public school music teachers. Our expectations of music education and its sphere of influence have been far too modest. To the extent we segregate music education from the goals and objectives of music studies more broadly, we neglect our collective responsibility for the musical life of our country. We have focused inwardly, engrossed in our specialties, leaving the design of school music curricula and the fragile environments in which they must compete for survival to the whims of non-musician bureaucrats and politicians. We have been less than successful in our collective obligation to enhance the musical well-being of the country. Changing these circumstances is among our greatest challenges in the decades ahead.


Author(s):  
Marija R. Marković ◽  
Anastasija S. Mamutović ◽  
Zorica Č. Stanisavljević Petrović

The paper debates some aspects of reform and change in secondary music education. The reforms in secondary music education are in line with the general tendencies in the school system in Serbia. Accordingly, the paper discusses the leading aspects of the changes in the secondary music schools and their alignment with similar schools in the European educational system.The main objective of this theoretical research is to identify significant aspects of changes related to curriculum change and innovation in content - textbooks, and the assessment process. The paper uses a qualitative approach, based on an analysis of selected research studies published after 2001. They cover key topics related to changes in secondary music schools. In spite of the fact that there are few research papers in our region that deal with the implications of the reform in the secondary music education system, based on the analysis of the available papers we can conclude, that there are steps to meet the planned changes.


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