Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir

The purpose of this study was to examine the evolution of choral sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir, by describing the choral sound employed by each conductor throughout the history of the choirs including F. Melius Christiansen, Olaf C. Christiansen, Kenneth Jennings, and Anton A...

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Other Authors: Zabriskie, Alan (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-0673
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spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1688342019-07-01T03:58:21Z Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir Zabriskie, Alan (authoraut) Fenton, Kevin (professor directing dissertation) Shaftel, Matthew (university representative) Thomas, André J. (committee member) Bowers, Judy (committee member) College of Music (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf The purpose of this study was to examine the evolution of choral sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir, by describing the choral sound employed by each conductor throughout the history of the choirs including F. Melius Christiansen, Olaf C. Christiansen, Kenneth Jennings, and Anton Armstrong of the St. Olaf Choir and John Finley Williamson, George Lynn, Joseph Flummerfelt, and Joe Miller of the Westminster Choir. After describing each conductor's desired choral sound, their methodologies were determined using the following research questions: 1) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor in the selection of singers? 2) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor in the placement of singers? 3) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor with regards to vowels and diction? 4) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor with regards to vocal pedagogy? The St. Olaf Choir began by achieving a blended overall choral sound that matched the tone quality of one individual voice in each section. The choral sound evolved to include an ensemble of intelligent soloists based on the lyric, art-song approach to singing. F. Melius Christiansen sought a dark blended choral sound where singers matched individual tone quality to that of an ideal. Olaf Christiansen developed a bright overall choral sound that emphasized clarity and meaning of text. Kenneth Jennings produced a free, relaxed choral sound by developing a lyric, art-song approach to choral singing. Anton Armstrong also crafted a lyric art-song approach to choral sound, but one that was made up of a combination of intelligent soloists. In the beginning, the main choral sound created by the Westminster Choir consisted of a group of singers who produced their own individual tone quality, which was full, dark, and vibrant. The sound has evolved to include a greater emphasis on core, resulting in a bright, blended choral sound. John Finley Williamson sought a dark, rich, vibrant tone quality that emphasized the individual voices within the ensemble rather than blend. George Lynn approached choral sound in a similar way to John Finley Williamson. Joseph Flummerfelt also employed a soloistic approach to choral singing, but achieved a sense of blend through rhythmic alignment of vowels and placement of singers. Joe Miller generated a core in the choral sound that resulted in a bright, less-soloistic overall sound. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2010. Date of Defense: March 3, 2010. Singer Placement, Vocal Pedagogy, Placement of Singers, Vowels and Diction, Selection of Singers, Vocal Technique, Choral Tone Quality Includes bibliographical references. Kevin Fenton, Professor Directing Dissertation; Matthew Shaftel, University Representative; André J. Thomas, Committee Member; Judy Bowers, Committee Member. Music FSU_migr_etd-0673 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-0673 http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A168834/datastream/TN/view/Evolution%20of%20Choral%20Sound%20of%20the%20St.%20Olaf%20Choir%20and%20the%20Westminster%20Choir.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Music
spellingShingle Music
Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
description The purpose of this study was to examine the evolution of choral sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir, by describing the choral sound employed by each conductor throughout the history of the choirs including F. Melius Christiansen, Olaf C. Christiansen, Kenneth Jennings, and Anton Armstrong of the St. Olaf Choir and John Finley Williamson, George Lynn, Joseph Flummerfelt, and Joe Miller of the Westminster Choir. After describing each conductor's desired choral sound, their methodologies were determined using the following research questions: 1) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor in the selection of singers? 2) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor in the placement of singers? 3) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor with regards to vowels and diction? 4) What methodologies were utilized by each conductor with regards to vocal pedagogy? The St. Olaf Choir began by achieving a blended overall choral sound that matched the tone quality of one individual voice in each section. The choral sound evolved to include an ensemble of intelligent soloists based on the lyric, art-song approach to singing. F. Melius Christiansen sought a dark blended choral sound where singers matched individual tone quality to that of an ideal. Olaf Christiansen developed a bright overall choral sound that emphasized clarity and meaning of text. Kenneth Jennings produced a free, relaxed choral sound by developing a lyric, art-song approach to choral singing. Anton Armstrong also crafted a lyric art-song approach to choral sound, but one that was made up of a combination of intelligent soloists. In the beginning, the main choral sound created by the Westminster Choir consisted of a group of singers who produced their own individual tone quality, which was full, dark, and vibrant. The sound has evolved to include a greater emphasis on core, resulting in a bright, blended choral sound. John Finley Williamson sought a dark, rich, vibrant tone quality that emphasized the individual voices within the ensemble rather than blend. George Lynn approached choral sound in a similar way to John Finley Williamson. Joseph Flummerfelt also employed a soloistic approach to choral singing, but achieved a sense of blend through rhythmic alignment of vowels and placement of singers. Joe Miller generated a core in the choral sound that resulted in a bright, less-soloistic overall sound. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2010. === Date of Defense: March 3, 2010. === Singer Placement, Vocal Pedagogy, Placement of Singers, Vowels and Diction, Selection of Singers, Vocal Technique, Choral Tone Quality === Includes bibliographical references. === Kevin Fenton, Professor Directing Dissertation; Matthew Shaftel, University Representative; André J. Thomas, Committee Member; Judy Bowers, Committee Member.
author2 Zabriskie, Alan (authoraut)
author_facet Zabriskie, Alan (authoraut)
title Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
title_short Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
title_full Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
title_fullStr Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of Choral Sound of the St. Olaf Choir and the Westminster Choir
title_sort evolution of choral sound of the st. olaf choir and the westminster choir
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-0673
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