Abstract

Context and Aims: Social and cognitive processes underlying individual classical musicians' and duo performers' preparation for performance have been explored using longitudinal case studies. Social processes can be inferred from rehearsal talk and recent studies have focused on its content and nature. Cognitive processes can be inferred from score annotations representing musicians' thoughts while practicing, rehearsing (rehearsal features), and playing or singing from memory (performance cues). We report three studies conducted by two practitioner-researchers: (1) of rehearsal talk; (2) of rehearsal features and thoughts while performing; and (3) a triangulation (as it were) of the two kinds of data to gauge the potential for rehearsal talk to predict the use of performance cues.Methods: A singer and viola player formed a new duo to prepare two songs, new to them both, for two performances on the same day and a third performance 10 months later. Their practice and rehearsal sessions, over the course of seven days, were recorded and transcribed. The musicians annotated copies of the scores after rehearsing and after each performance. Each musician performed one of the two songs from memory. First, verbal data were coded and analyzed using two frameworks for categorizing socio-emotional interactions and musical dimensions, respectively. Second, their annotations were categorized and compared, and finally the frameworks were combined so that correlations between rehearsal talk and performance cues could be calculated.Results: The musicians' verbal interactions were positive and task-related; significant changes over time were observed only in the extent to which they showed solidarity toward each other. Analysis of their annotations illustrates similarities and differences between their attention to specific features of the music while rehearsing and performing, particularly from memory. Rehearsal talk predicted performance cues in the third performance, but not the first or second.Conclusion: Musicians' talk cannot be assumed to reflect musicians' actions. The study of musicians' verbal interactions may be less useful for determining cognitive than social processes underlying preparation for performance. Nevertheless, the study provides a detailed snapshot of classical musicians' “real world” preparation for performance, highlighting the role of spontaneity in performance, and underlining differences between what happens in the studio and what can happen on stage.

Highlights

  • When two musicians come together for the first time to rehearse a piece of music that is new to them both, they have to develop two kinds of familiarity: first with each other, as duo partners and, second, with the music

  • Social familiarity has previously been manipulated in an experiment designed to explore verbal (Ginsborg and King, 2012) and non-verbal communication (King and Ginsborg, 2011) between members of two established student singer-pianist duos and two established professional singer-pianist duos

  • In both studies the content analyses were guided by a framework of musical dimensions incorporating references to basic/structural, interpretive rehearsal features initially developed by Chaffin et al (2002: see Table 2) and rehearsal strategies

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Summary

Introduction

When two musicians come together for the first time to rehearse a piece of music that is new to them both, they have to develop two kinds of familiarity: first with each other, as duo partners (social familiarity) and, second, with the music. Verbal communication between a singer and a pianist was explored by Ginsborg et al (2006) and between the members of four singer-pianist duos by Ginsborg and King (2012) using content analyses of rehearsal talk. In both studies the content analyses were guided by a framework of musical dimensions incorporating references to basic/structural, interpretive (including expressive) rehearsal features initially developed by Chaffin et al (2002: see Table 2) and rehearsal strategies. The verbal utterances of the singers and pianists in Ginsborg and King’s study were coded using the Interaction Process Analysis framework developed by Bales (1999: see Table 3)

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