Abstract

To describe the emission of upper high notes by professional sopranos by means of the auditory-perceptual evaluation of the singers' voices and self-reports. Five professional sopranos performed an excerpt from a Bellini opera which involved the emission of an upper high note. The auditory-perceptual evaluation was carried out by three speech-language therapists and three singing teachers, who considered brightness, loudness, metal quality, vibrato, breathiness, and resonance on a visual-analytical scale, based on each singer's emission of high notes. After the recording, the singers were asked to answer a proprioceptive questionnaire on the physical sensations that they had as they emitted upper high notes. An inferential analysis of the data from the auditory-perceptual evaluation was conducted, and the singers' self-reports were summarized and then orthographically transcribed. In the auditory-perceptual analysis, the emission of upper high notes was characterized according to the presence of brightness, loudness, metal quality, vibrato, and anterior resonance, as perceived by speech-language therapists and singing teachers. In the proprioceptive report, all singers reported laryngeal elevation and a need to use respiratory support in order to emit upper high notes. Upper high notes are characterized by a bright vocal emission, enhanced loudness, with a metallic quality and vibrato, little or no breathiness, accompanied by a sensation of laryngeal elevation and a need for respiratory support.

Highlights

  • Studying the emission of upper high notes, widely used by sopranos, constitutes a challenge in the study of voice due to the lack of a precise definition thereof

  • Taking into account the emission of upper high notes as the basis of a soprano’s vocal emission, the objective of this study was to describe the emission of upper high notes by professional sopranos by means of the auditory-perceptual evaluation of the singers’ voices as conducted by speech therapists and singing teachers and self-reports as made by the singers

  • Singing teachers described the emission of upper high notes as bright (p = 0.00), having high loudness (p = 0.01), being metallic (p = 0.00), having vibrato (p = 0.00), and being less breathy (p = 0.00); they considered this type of emission as having an anterior resonance

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Summary

Introduction

Studying the emission of upper high notes, widely used by sopranos, constitutes a challenge in the study of voice due to the lack of a precise definition thereof. It is believed that the personal proximity between singers and composers may have contributed to upper high notes being written, thereby formalizing this type of emission in classical singing[4]. The character Queen of the Night from the opera “The Magic Flute”, which Mozart wrote to one of his wives[4], is an example of this feature. Such practice was consolidated in Bel Canto during Romanticism by composers such as Bellini, Rossini, and Donizetti[4]

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