Abstract

Amateur musical ensembles draw participants from widely varying disciplines into shared artistic activity in a way that few other artforms do; in particular, choral music, in which bodies both create and directly receive sound, raises profound questions of how performers’ uniquely embodied creative approaches interact. Amateur choral singing therefore offers a lens into how musical creativity is distributed among, and emergent from, a diverse group of individuals. This article explores how the performance of indeterminate and improvisatory choral works offers a powerful example of this distributed creative agency via a network of sounding bodies.
 This article centres on a case study (March–October 2017) involving three British amateur choirs in the performance of improvisatory choral scores by Kerry Andrew (2005) and Cornelius Cardew (1968–70). Complexity Theory (Davis and Sumara 2006) offers a useful framework for understanding how creative impulses and constructions interact; both the vocal expression and corporeal receipt of these creative ideas occurs in an embodied way, drawing on dance and embodiment theory (Sheets-Johnstone 2009, Downey 2002). The research process and qualitative-data-processing methodology (Charmaz 2014) of the case study are described, before findings are laid out with a view to how they point towards ideas of embodied, complex interaction. These findings offer an important, and hitherto unexplored, view into how Complexity Theory (a common theoretical framework in other fields across the sciences and humanities) might usefully describe musical performance. In transcending attempts to atomise ensemble interaction according to shared intellectual knowledge and verbal communication, the complex, embodied interaction of diverse singers, through the physical connection of sound, might involve those singers in the distributed authorship of a musical work.

Highlights

  • Interdisciplinarity can occur in music-making in different ways

  • In the case study described in this article, singers from widely varying disciplinary backgrounds made unique, embodied contributions to an emergent creative community and to its audible outcomes

  • If Complexity is to prove useful in understanding ensemble performance generally, it will have to arise within a wider range of discourses and situations than that of amateur aleatory choral performance

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Summary

Introduction

Galbreath: Embodied Complexity in Choral Singing the performance of aleatory choral works offers a powerful example of distributed creative agency via an interconnected network of sounding bodies This view broadens the concept of interdisciplinarity considerably, but, rather than weakening the term by loosening its specificity, it offers a reconsideration of how musical knowledge is created and shared: not just through conversation and conceptual knowledge exchanges, and via the embodied experience of sound. To make this argument, I focus here on a case study with amateur singers performing aleatory choral music. St Boniface Church, Quinton, Birmingham DEFRA, Nobel House, London Fentham Hall, Hampton-inArden, Warwickshire

18 March 2017 29 October 2017
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