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Falsetto

Falsetto (/fɔːlˈsɛt, fɒl-/ fawl-SET-oh, fol-, Italian: [falˈsetto]; Italian diminutive of falso, "false") is the vocal register occupying the frequency range just above the modal voice register and overlapping with it by approximately one octave.

It is produced by the vibration of the ligamentous edges of the vocal cords, in whole or in part. Commonly cited in the context of singing, falsetto, a characteristic of phonation by both sexes, is also one of four main spoken vocal registers recognized by speech pathology.

The term falsetto is most often used in the context of singing to refer to a type of vocal phonation that enables the singer to sing notes beyond the vocal range of the normal or modal voice.[1] The typical tone of falsetto register or M2, usually has a characteristic breathy[2][3] and flute-like sound relatively free of overtones[4][5]—which is more limited than its modal counterpart in both dynamic variation and tone quality.[6] However, William Vennard points out that while most untrained people can sound comparatively "breathy" or "hooty" when using falsetto production, there are in rarer cases individuals who have developed a much stronger falsetto sound production, which has more "ring" to it.[7]

Anatomical process edit

The modal voice, or modal register, and falsetto register differ primarily in the action of the vocal cords. Production of the normal voice involves vibration of the entire vocal cord, with the glottis opening first at the bottom and then at the top. Production of falsetto, on the other hand, vibrates only the ligamentous edges of the vocal folds while leaving each fold's body relatively relaxed.[8] Transition from modal voice to falsetto occurs when each vocal cord's main body, or vocalis muscle, relaxes, enabling the cricothyroid muscles to stretch the vocal ligaments.[6] William Vennard describes this process as follows:

With the vocalis muscles relaxed it is possible for the cricothyroids to place great longitudinal tension upon the vocal ligaments. The tension can be increased in order to raise the pitch even after the maximum length of the cords has been reached. This makes the vocal folds thin so that there is negligible vertical phase difference. The vocalis muscles fall to the sides of the larynx and the vibration take place almost entirely in the ligaments.[9]

In the modal register, the vocal folds (when viewed with a stroboscope) are seen to contact with each other completely during each vibration, closing the gap between them fully, if just for a very short time. This closure cuts off the escaping air. When the air pressure in the trachea rises as a result of this closure, the folds are blown apart, while the vocal processes of the arytenoid cartilages remain in apposition. This creates an oval gap between the folds and some air escapes, lowering the pressure inside the trachea. Rhythmic repetition of this movement creates the note.[1]

 
Vocal fold, scheme
 
Glottal cycle, falsetto

In falsetto, however, the vocal folds are seen to be blown apart, and in untrained falsetto singers, a permanent oval orifice is left in the middle between the edges of the two folds through which a certain volume of air escapes continuously as long as the register is engaged (the singer is singing using the voice). In skilled countertenors, however, the mucous membrane of the vocal folds contact with each other completely during each vibration cycle. The arytenoid cartilages are held in firm apposition in this voice register also. The length or size of the oval orifice or separation between the folds can vary, but it is known to get bigger as the pressure of air pushed out is increased.[1]

The folds are made up of elastic and fatty tissue. The folds are covered on the surface by laryngeal mucous membrane, which is supported deeper down underneath by the innermost fibres of the thyroarytenoid muscle. In falsetto, the extreme membranous edges (i.e., the edges furthest away from the middle of the gap between the folds) appear to be the only parts vibrating. The mass corresponding to the innermost part of the thyroarytenoid muscle remains still and motionless.[1]

Some singers feel a sense of muscular relief when they change from the modal register to the falsetto register.[1]

Research has revealed that not all speakers and singers produce falsetto in exactly the same way. Some speakers and singers leave the cartilaginous portion of the glottis open (sometimes called 'mutational chink'), and only the front two-thirds of the vocal ligaments enter the vibration. The resulting sound, which is typical of many adolescents, may be pure and flutelike, but is usually soft and anemic in quality. In others, the full length of the glottis opens and closes in each cycle. In still others, a phenomenon known as damping appears, with the amount of glottal opening becoming less and less as the pitch rises, until only a tiny slit appears on the highest pitches. The mutational chink type of falsetto is considered inefficient and weak, but there is little information available about the relative strengths and weaknesses of the other two types.[6]

Female falsetto edit

Both sexes are physically capable of phonating in the falsetto register. Prior to research done by scientists in the 1950s and 1960s, it was widely believed that only men were able to produce falsetto. One possible explanation for this failure to recognize the female falsetto sooner is that when men phonate in the falsetto register there is a much more pronounced change in timbre and dynamic level between the modal and falsetto registers than there is in female voices. This is due in part to the difference in the length and mass of the vocal folds and to the difference in frequency ranges.[1] However, motion picture and video studies of laryngeal action prove that women can and do produce falsetto, and electromyographic studies by several leading speech pathologists and vocal pedagogists provide further confirmation.[1]

While scientific evidence has proven that women have a falsetto register, the issue of 'female falsetto' has been met with controversy among teachers of singing.[6] This controversy does not exist within the sciences and arguments against the existence of female falsetto do not align with current physiological evidence. Some pioneers in vocal pedagogy, like Margaret Green and William Vennard, were quick to adopt current scientific research in the 1950s, and pursued capturing the biological process of female falsetto on film. They went further to incorporate their research into their pedagogical method of teaching female singers.[10] Others refused to accept the idea, and opposition to the concept of female falsetto has continued among some teachers of singing long after scientific evidence had proven the existence of female falsetto.[6] Celebrated opera singer and voice teacher Richard Miller pointed out in his 1997 publication National Schools of Singing: English, French, German, and Italian that while the German school of voice teachers had largely embraced the idea of a female falsetto into pedagogical practice, there is division within the French and English schools and a complete rejection of the idea of female falsetto in the Italian school of singing.[11] In his 2004 book, Solutions for Singers: Tools For Performers and Teachers, Miller said, "It is illogical to speak of a female falsetto, because the female is incapable of producing a timbre in the upper range that is radically different from its mezza voce or voce piena in testa qualities".[12]

However, other writers of singing have warned about the dangers of failing to recognize that women have a falsetto register. McKinney, who expressed alarm that many books on the art of singing completely ignore or gloss over the issue of female falsetto or insist that women do not have falsetto, argues that many young female singers substitute falsetto for the upper portion of the modal voice.[6] He believes that this failure to recognize the female falsetto voice has led to the misidentification of young contraltos and mezzo-sopranos as sopranos, as it is easier for these lower voice types to sing in the soprano tessitura using their falsetto register.[6]

Musical history edit

Use of falsetto voice in western music is very old. Its origins are difficult to trace because of ambiguities in terminology. Possibly when 13th century writers distinguished between chest, throat and head registers (pectoris, guttoris, capitis) they meant capitis to refer to what would be later called falsetto.[13] By the 16th century the term falsetto was common in Italy. The physician, Giovanni Camillo Maffei, in his book Discorso della voce e del modo d'apparare di cantar di garganta in 1562, explained that when a bass singer sang in the soprano range, the voice was called "falsetto".[13] In a book by GB Mancini, called Pensieri e riflessioni written in 1774, falsetto is equated with "voce di testa" (translated as 'head voice').[13]

The falsetto register is used by male countertenors to sing in the alto and occasionally the soprano range and was the standard before women sang in choirs. Falsetto is occasionally used by early music specialists today and regularly in British cathedral choirs by men who sing the alto line.[14]

There is a difference between the modern usage of the "head voice" term and its previous meaning in the renaissance as a type of falsetto, according to many singing professionals. These days, head voice is typically defined as a mix of chest and head voice, therefore created a stronger sound than falsetto.[15] The falsetto can be coloured or changed to sound different. It can be given classical styling to sound as male classical countertenors make it sound, or be sung in more contemporary musical styles.[16]

In opera, it is believed that the chest voice, middle voice and head voice occur in women.[17] The head voice of a man is, according to David A. Clippinger generally equivalent to the middle voice of a woman.[18] This may mean the head voice of a woman is a man's falsetto equivalent. Although, in contemporary teaching, some teachers no longer talk of the middle voice, choosing to call it the head voice as with men. Falsetto is not generally counted by classical purists as a part of the vocal range of anyone except countertenors. There are exceptions, however, such as the baryton-Martin which uses falsetto (see baritone article).[19]

Use in singing edit

Falsetto is more limited in dynamic variation and tone quality than the modal voice.[citation needed] Falsetto does not connect to modal voice except at very low volumes, leading to vocal breaks when transitioning from modal voice.[citation needed] In the absence of modern vocal training to hold back the volume of modal voice, in this overlapping area a given pitch in modal voice will be louder than the same pitch sung in falsetto.[20] The type of vocal cord vibration that produces the falsetto voice precludes loud singing except in the highest tones of that register; it also limits the available tone colors because of the simplicity of its waveform.[citation needed] Modal voice is capable of producing much more complex waveforms and infinite varieties of tone color.[citation needed] Falsetto, however, does involve less physical effort by the singer than the modal voice and, when properly used, can make possible some desirable tonal effects.[6]

Use in speech edit

The ability to speak within the falsetto register is possible for almost all men and women. The use of falsetto is considered uncommon in normal Western speech and is most often employed within the context of humor.[21] However, the use of falsetto speech varies by culture and its use has been studied in African Americans[22] and gay men[23] in certain contexts. Its use has also been noted in the U.S. South.[24] Pitch changes ranging to falsetto are also characteristic of British English.[25]

Some people who speak frequently or entirely in the falsetto register are identified by speech pathologists as suffering from a functional dysphonia.[21] Falsetto also describes the momentary, but often repeated, fluctuations in pitch emitted by both sexes while undergoing voice change during adolescence. These changes, however, are more apparent and occur with greater frequency in boys than they do in girls.[26] Failure to undergo proper voice-change is called puberphonia.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Stanley Sadie; George Grove, eds. (1995). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: South China Printing Company. ISBN 9781561591749. OCLC 5676891.
  2. ^ Joseph C. Stemple; Leslie E. Glaze; Bernice K. Gerdeman (2000). Clinical Voice Pathology: Theory and Management. Singular. p. 359.
  3. ^ Gillyanne Kayes (2000). Singing and the Actor. Psychology Press. p. 156.
  4. ^ Shirlee Emmons; Constance Chase (2006). Prescriptions for Choral Excellence. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198040231.
  5. ^ Van Ambrose Christy (1975). Expressive Singing. W. C. Brown. p. 95.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h McKinney, James (1994). The Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults. Genovex Music Group. ISBN 978-1565939400.
  7. ^ William Vennard (1967). Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic. Carl Fischer Music. p. 89.
  8. ^ Large, John (February–March 1972). "Towards an Integrated Physiologic-Acoustic Theory of Vocal Registers". The NATS Bulletin. 28: 30–35.
  9. ^ Vennard, William (1967). Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic. Carl Fischer. ISBN 978-0825800559.
  10. ^ Greene, Margaret; Lesley Mathieson (2001). The Voice and its Disorders. John Wiley & Sons; 6th Edition. ISBN 978-1861561961.
  11. ^ Richard Miller (1997). National Schools of Singing: English, French, German, and Italian. Scarecrow Press. p. 115.
  12. ^ Miller, Richard. Solutions for Singers: Tools for Performers and Teachers (Oxford University Press, 2004), page 148
  13. ^ a b c THE NEW GROVE Dictionary of MUSIC & MUSICIANS. Edited by Stanley Sadie, Volume 6. Edmund to Fryklund. ISBN 1-56159-174-2, Copyright Macmillan 1980.
  14. ^ Sadie, Stanley. 2001. "Alto." New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
  15. ^ Williams, Mark (5 October 2016). "What's the Difference Between Head Voice and Falsetto". The Vocal Coach. Retrieved 11 September 2017.
  16. ^ Review Archived 2014-11-30 at archive.today of Justin Timberlake: FutureSex/LoveSounds - "Timberlake's falsetto layering on top of one other as the songs build to their crescendos."
  17. ^ The OXFORD DICTIONARY OF OPERA. JOHN WARRACK AND EWAN WEST, ISBN 0-19-869164-5
  18. ^ Clippinger, David Alva (1917). The Head Voice and Other Problems: Practical Talks on Singing. Oliver Ditson Company. p. 24.Project Gutenberg etext.
  19. ^ THE NEW GROVE Dictionary of MUSIC & MUSICIANS. Edited by Stanley Sadie, Volume 2. Back to Bolivia. ISBN 1-56159-174-2, Copyright Macmillan Publishers Limited 1980.
  20. ^ Van den Berg, J.W. (December 1963). "Vocal Ligaments versus Registers". The NATS Bulletin. 19: 18.
  21. ^ a b Cooper, Morton (1973). Modern Techniques of Vocal Rehabilitation. Charles C. Thomas.
  22. ^ Nielsen, Rasmus (2010). ""I ain't Never Been Charged with Nothing!": The Use of Falsetto Speech as a Linguistic Strategy of Indignation". University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics. Vol. 15, no. 2, Article 13. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  23. ^ Podesva, Robert J. (2007). "Phonation type as a stylistic variable: The use of falsetto in constructing a persona" (PDF). Journal of Sociolinguistics. 11 (4). Blackwell Publishing Ltd: 478–504. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9841.2007.00334.x. S2CID 35856647.
  24. ^ Fennell, Barbara A. (2001). A History of English: A Sociolinguistic Approach. Blackwell Publishing. p. 236.
  25. ^ Herman, Lewis; Herman, Margaurite Shalett (1997). Foreign Dialects: A Manual for Actors, Directors and Writers. Rutledge. p. 45.
  26. ^ Aronson, Arnold Elvin; Bless, Diane M. (2009). Clinical Voice Disorders.

Further reading edit

  • Appell, Thomas (1993). Can You Sing a HIGH C Without Straining?. VDP. ISBN 978-0963233974.

External links edit

  • Glossary definition of falsetto 2013-04-01 at the Wayback Machine at Virginia Tech's Web site
  • Story about the falsetto in rock music in The Boston Globe
  • Video: vocal coach Kevin Richards explains the difference between falsetto and head voice

falsetto, this, article, about, voices, higher, than, normal, vocal, range, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔː, fawl, italian, falˈsetto, italian, diminutive, falso, false, vocal, register, occupying, frequency, range, just, above, modal, voice, register, overlap. This article is about voices higher than the normal vocal range For other uses see Falsetto disambiguation Falsetto f ɔː l ˈ s ɛ t oʊ f ɒ l fawl SET oh fol Italian falˈsetto Italian diminutive of falso false is the vocal register occupying the frequency range just above the modal voice register and overlapping with it by approximately one octave It is produced by the vibration of the ligamentous edges of the vocal cords in whole or in part Commonly cited in the context of singing falsetto a characteristic of phonation by both sexes is also one of four main spoken vocal registers recognized by speech pathology The term falsetto is most often used in the context of singing to refer to a type of vocal phonation that enables the singer to sing notes beyond the vocal range of the normal or modal voice 1 The typical tone of falsetto register or M2 usually has a characteristic breathy 2 3 and flute like sound relatively free of overtones 4 5 which is more limited than its modal counterpart in both dynamic variation and tone quality 6 However William Vennard points out that while most untrained people can sound comparatively breathy or hooty when using falsetto production there are in rarer cases individuals who have developed a much stronger falsetto sound production which has more ring to it 7 Contents 1 Anatomical process 2 Female falsetto 3 Musical history 4 Use in singing 5 Use in speech 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksAnatomical process editThe modal voice or modal register and falsetto register differ primarily in the action of the vocal cords Production of the normal voice involves vibration of the entire vocal cord with the glottis opening first at the bottom and then at the top Production of falsetto on the other hand vibrates only the ligamentous edges of the vocal folds while leaving each fold s body relatively relaxed 8 Transition from modal voice to falsetto occurs when each vocal cord s main body or vocalis muscle relaxes enabling the cricothyroid muscles to stretch the vocal ligaments 6 William Vennard describes this process as follows With the vocalis muscles relaxed it is possible for the cricothyroids to place great longitudinal tension upon the vocal ligaments The tension can be increased in order to raise the pitch even after the maximum length of the cords has been reached This makes the vocal folds thin so that there is negligible vertical phase difference The vocalis muscles fall to the sides of the larynx and the vibration take place almost entirely in the ligaments 9 In the modal register the vocal folds when viewed with a stroboscope are seen to contact with each other completely during each vibration closing the gap between them fully if just for a very short time This closure cuts off the escaping air When the air pressure in the trachea rises as a result of this closure the folds are blown apart while the vocal processes of the arytenoid cartilages remain in apposition This creates an oval gap between the folds and some air escapes lowering the pressure inside the trachea Rhythmic repetition of this movement creates the note 1 nbsp Vocal fold scheme nbsp Glottal cycle falsetto In falsetto however the vocal folds are seen to be blown apart and in untrained falsetto singers a permanent oval orifice is left in the middle between the edges of the two folds through which a certain volume of air escapes continuously as long as the register is engaged the singer is singing using the voice In skilled countertenors however the mucous membrane of the vocal folds contact with each other completely during each vibration cycle The arytenoid cartilages are held in firm apposition in this voice register also The length or size of the oval orifice or separation between the folds can vary but it is known to get bigger as the pressure of air pushed out is increased 1 The folds are made up of elastic and fatty tissue The folds are covered on the surface by laryngeal mucous membrane which is supported deeper down underneath by the innermost fibres of the thyroarytenoid muscle In falsetto the extreme membranous edges i e the edges furthest away from the middle of the gap between the folds appear to be the only parts vibrating The mass corresponding to the innermost part of the thyroarytenoid muscle remains still and motionless 1 Some singers feel a sense of muscular relief when they change from the modal register to the falsetto register 1 Research has revealed that not all speakers and singers produce falsetto in exactly the same way Some speakers and singers leave the cartilaginous portion of the glottis open sometimes called mutational chink and only the front two thirds of the vocal ligaments enter the vibration The resulting sound which is typical of many adolescents may be pure and flutelike but is usually soft and anemic in quality In others the full length of the glottis opens and closes in each cycle In still others a phenomenon known as damping appears with the amount of glottal opening becoming less and less as the pitch rises until only a tiny slit appears on the highest pitches The mutational chink type of falsetto is considered inefficient and weak but there is little information available about the relative strengths and weaknesses of the other two types 6 Female falsetto editBoth sexes are physically capable of phonating in the falsetto register Prior to research done by scientists in the 1950s and 1960s it was widely believed that only men were able to produce falsetto One possible explanation for this failure to recognize the female falsetto sooner is that when men phonate in the falsetto register there is a much more pronounced change in timbre and dynamic level between the modal and falsetto registers than there is in female voices This is due in part to the difference in the length and mass of the vocal folds and to the difference in frequency ranges 1 However motion picture and video studies of laryngeal action prove that women can and do produce falsetto and electromyographic studies by several leading speech pathologists and vocal pedagogists provide further confirmation 1 While scientific evidence has proven that women have a falsetto register the issue of female falsetto has been met with controversy among teachers of singing 6 This controversy does not exist within the sciences and arguments against the existence of female falsetto do not align with current physiological evidence Some pioneers in vocal pedagogy like Margaret Green and William Vennard were quick to adopt current scientific research in the 1950s and pursued capturing the biological process of female falsetto on film They went further to incorporate their research into their pedagogical method of teaching female singers 10 Others refused to accept the idea and opposition to the concept of female falsetto has continued among some teachers of singing long after scientific evidence had proven the existence of female falsetto 6 Celebrated opera singer and voice teacher Richard Miller pointed out in his 1997 publication National Schools of Singing English French German and Italian that while the German school of voice teachers had largely embraced the idea of a female falsetto into pedagogical practice there is division within the French and English schools and a complete rejection of the idea of female falsetto in the Italian school of singing 11 In his 2004 book Solutions for Singers Tools For Performers and Teachers Miller said It is illogical to speak of a female falsetto because the female is incapable of producing a timbre in the upper range that is radically different from its mezza voce or voce piena in testa qualities 12 However other writers of singing have warned about the dangers of failing to recognize that women have a falsetto register McKinney who expressed alarm that many books on the art of singing completely ignore or gloss over the issue of female falsetto or insist that women do not have falsetto argues that many young female singers substitute falsetto for the upper portion of the modal voice 6 He believes that this failure to recognize the female falsetto voice has led to the misidentification of young contraltos and mezzo sopranos as sopranos as it is easier for these lower voice types to sing in the soprano tessitura using their falsetto register 6 Musical history editUse of falsetto voice in western music is very old Its origins are difficult to trace because of ambiguities in terminology Possibly when 13th century writers distinguished between chest throat and head registers pectoris guttoris capitis they meant capitis to refer to what would be later called falsetto 13 By the 16th century the term falsetto was common in Italy The physician Giovanni Camillo Maffei in his book Discorso della voce e del modo d apparare di cantar di garganta in 1562 explained that when a bass singer sang in the soprano range the voice was called falsetto 13 In a book by GB Mancini called Pensieri e riflessioni written in 1774 falsetto is equated with voce di testa translated as head voice 13 The falsetto register is used by male countertenors to sing in the alto and occasionally the soprano range and was the standard before women sang in choirs Falsetto is occasionally used by early music specialists today and regularly in British cathedral choirs by men who sing the alto line 14 There is a difference between the modern usage of the head voice term and its previous meaning in the renaissance as a type of falsetto according to many singing professionals These days head voice is typically defined as a mix of chest and head voice therefore created a stronger sound than falsetto 15 The falsetto can be coloured or changed to sound different It can be given classical styling to sound as male classical countertenors make it sound or be sung in more contemporary musical styles 16 In opera it is believed that the chest voice middle voice and head voice occur in women 17 The head voice of a man is according to David A Clippinger generally equivalent to the middle voice of a woman 18 This may mean the head voice of a woman is a man s falsetto equivalent Although in contemporary teaching some teachers no longer talk of the middle voice choosing to call it the head voice as with men Falsetto is not generally counted by classical purists as a part of the vocal range of anyone except countertenors There are exceptions however such as the baryton Martin which uses falsetto see baritone article 19 Use in singing editFalsetto is more limited in dynamic variation and tone quality than the modal voice citation needed Falsetto does not connect to modal voice except at very low volumes leading to vocal breaks when transitioning from modal voice citation needed In the absence of modern vocal training to hold back the volume of modal voice in this overlapping area a given pitch in modal voice will be louder than the same pitch sung in falsetto 20 The type of vocal cord vibration that produces the falsetto voice precludes loud singing except in the highest tones of that register it also limits the available tone colors because of the simplicity of its waveform citation needed Modal voice is capable of producing much more complex waveforms and infinite varieties of tone color citation needed Falsetto however does involve less physical effort by the singer than the modal voice and when properly used can make possible some desirable tonal effects 6 Use in speech editThe ability to speak within the falsetto register is possible for almost all men and women The use of falsetto is considered uncommon in normal Western speech and is most often employed within the context of humor 21 However the use of falsetto speech varies by culture and its use has been studied in African Americans 22 and gay men 23 in certain contexts Its use has also been noted in the U S South 24 Pitch changes ranging to falsetto are also characteristic of British English 25 Some people who speak frequently or entirely in the falsetto register are identified by speech pathologists as suffering from a functional dysphonia 21 Falsetto also describes the momentary but often repeated fluctuations in pitch emitted by both sexes while undergoing voice change during adolescence These changes however are more apparent and occur with greater frequency in boys than they do in girls 26 Failure to undergo proper voice change is called puberphonia See also editCreaky voice Human voiceReferences edit a b c d e f g Stanley Sadie George Grove eds 1995 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians London South China Printing Company ISBN 9781561591749 OCLC 5676891 Joseph C Stemple Leslie E Glaze Bernice K Gerdeman 2000 Clinical Voice Pathology Theory and Management Singular p 359 Gillyanne Kayes 2000 Singing and the Actor Psychology Press p 156 Shirlee Emmons Constance Chase 2006 Prescriptions for Choral Excellence Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198040231 Van Ambrose Christy 1975 Expressive Singing W C Brown p 95 a b c d e f g h McKinney James 1994 The Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults Genovex Music Group ISBN 978 1565939400 William Vennard 1967 Singing The Mechanism and the Technic Carl Fischer Music p 89 Large John February March 1972 Towards an Integrated Physiologic Acoustic Theory of Vocal Registers The NATS Bulletin 28 30 35 Vennard William 1967 Singing The Mechanism and the Technic Carl Fischer ISBN 978 0825800559 Greene Margaret Lesley Mathieson 2001 The Voice and its Disorders John Wiley amp Sons 6th Edition ISBN 978 1861561961 Richard Miller 1997 National Schools of Singing English French German and Italian Scarecrow Press p 115 Miller Richard Solutions for Singers Tools for Performers and Teachers Oxford University Press 2004 page 148 a b c THE NEW GROVE Dictionary of MUSIC amp MUSICIANS Edited by Stanley Sadie Volume 6 Edmund to Fryklund ISBN 1 56159 174 2 Copyright Macmillan 1980 Sadie Stanley 2001 Alto New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Williams Mark 5 October 2016 What s the Difference Between Head Voice and Falsetto The Vocal Coach Retrieved 11 September 2017 Review Archived 2014 11 30 at archive today of Justin Timberlake FutureSex LoveSounds Timberlake s falsetto layering on top of one other as the songs build to their crescendos The OXFORD DICTIONARY OF OPERA JOHN WARRACK AND EWAN WEST ISBN 0 19 869164 5 Clippinger David Alva 1917 The Head Voice and Other Problems Practical Talks on Singing Oliver Ditson Company p 24 Project Gutenberg etext THE NEW GROVE Dictionary of MUSIC amp MUSICIANS Edited by Stanley Sadie Volume 2 Back to Bolivia ISBN 1 56159 174 2 Copyright Macmillan Publishers Limited 1980 Van den Berg J W December 1963 Vocal Ligaments versus Registers The NATS Bulletin 19 18 a b Cooper Morton 1973 Modern Techniques of Vocal Rehabilitation Charles C Thomas Nielsen Rasmus 2010 I ain t Never Been Charged with Nothing The Use of Falsetto Speech as a Linguistic Strategy of Indignation University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 15 no 2 Article 13 University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 6 December 2011 Podesva Robert J 2007 Phonation type as a stylistic variable The use of falsetto in constructing a persona PDF Journal of Sociolinguistics 11 4 Blackwell Publishing Ltd 478 504 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9841 2007 00334 x S2CID 35856647 Fennell Barbara A 2001 A History of English A Sociolinguistic Approach Blackwell Publishing p 236 Herman Lewis Herman Margaurite Shalett 1997 Foreign Dialects A Manual for Actors Directors and Writers Rutledge p 45 Aronson Arnold Elvin Bless Diane M 2009 Clinical Voice Disorders Further reading editAppell Thomas 1993 Can You Sing a HIGH C Without Straining VDP ISBN 978 0963233974 External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of singing nbsp Look up falsetto in Wiktionary the free dictionary Glossary definition of falsetto Archived 2013 04 01 at the Wayback Machine at Virginia Tech s Web site Story about the falsetto in rock music in The Boston Globe Video vocal coach Kevin Richards explains the difference between falsetto and head voice Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Falsetto amp oldid 1219093625, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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