Abstract

In this study we examine the effects of experience and culture on choral teachers’ description of choral tone across a range of genres. What does a “good” choral music performance sound like? Is there an objective standard of performance excellence, or is beauty in the eye of the beholder? In teacher preparation programs, choral directors in the United States have been taught to identify and teach particular, culturally-bounded standards of choral tone in their students. Choral directors evaluate their students’ voices along two dimensions: health and appropriateness. They discern and describe whether the student’s musical instrument—their voice—is producing sound in a healthy and non-damaging way. They also judge whether the style of their sound is appropriate for the music they are singing. However, teacher preparation programs do not provide common standards or lexicon for describing tone. This may increase implicit bias of individual directors, and inadvertently exacerbate ethnocentrism and harm students’ self-perception. Using a computational text analysis approach, we evaluate the content of open-ended survey responses from teachers, finding that the language used to describe and rate choral performance varies by experience, and by the choral selection (e.g., whether it is a traditional Western or non-Western song). We suggest that regularizing the terminology and providing common training through professional organizations can minimize potential bias and generate more systematic, precise use of qualitative descriptors of health and appropriateness, which will benefit students and teachers.

Highlights

  • A typical scholastic choir may experience a situation like this at a performance adjudication event: A high school choir proudly shows off the product of their semester of diligent work

  • We describe the procedures and methodology of our analyses of choral directors’ descriptions of choral tone

  • Each of the methodological approaches, such as LIWC and Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), represent an interim step in the analytical process

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Summary

Introduction

A typical scholastic choir may experience a situation like this at a performance adjudication event: A high school choir proudly shows off the product of their semester of diligent work. They perform three pieces in varied styles for the reputable choral music educators serving as judges: “Domine Fili Unigenite” by Palestrina; “The Seal Lullaby” by Eric Whitacre; and “Kaval Sviri”by Petar Lyondev. In their feedback, Judge 1 complimented their supported tone in their performance of “Kaval Sviri,” a Bulgarian folksong. Judge 3 commented that when singing the Bulgarian piece, the singers’ tone was strident, heavy, and unhealthy and that they shouldn’t sing in such a style. The choir that earlier felt confident in their performance is disheartened and confused

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