Low male voice repertoire in contemporary musical theatre: a studio and performance guide of selected songs 1996-2020 by
Example 4.2. Utilizing Melodic Pattern for Aural Skills and Vowels Exercise
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Gussin, Jeremy (DM Voice)
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- Chapter 5: ROCK/POP SONGS
Example 4.2. Utilizing Melodic Pattern for Aural Skills and Vowels Exercise.
Vocalism. “We Look to You” offers numerous opportunities for a singer to explore functional use of their voice as an actor – descriptive lyrics paired with slow harmonic rhythm can immediately be tied to a teacher’s struggle as an educator and as someone longing to escape banality. The repetitive text can also lead to exploration on emphasis and singing on consonants themselves as ways to engage an audience, scene partner, or colleague. The lower and more compact range of tessitura allows for the use of legit, classical influenced sounds within the learning process towards a unified timbre across registers, but takes away the potential issues of stamina in slightly higher standard repertoire (“Bois épais”, “Shenandoah” arr. Dougherty, “Tu lo Sai”, “This Nearly Was Mine”) or the desire to showcase a unified sound within a juried performance. Songs in a Similar Style. “Welcome to the World” from Man of No Importance, “The Great Comet of 1812” Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812, “I’d Rather Be Sailing” from A New Brain. 35 Chapter 5: ROCK/POP SONGS Sheri Sanders identifies nine overarching styles of popular music that have appeared in Broadway musicals over the last half-century and they are as follows – Motown; ‘70’s Folk/Rock; Disco; ‘80s Pop/Rock; Contemporary Pop, R&B, and Rap; Contemporary Rock, Punk, and Emo; Contemporary Pop/Rock; Country; and Poetic 1 . Most of these categories are split chronologically in reference to their development and heyday as popular styles in the United States. The contemporary adjective in this case references from 1990- present day for three categories. It is important when selecting audition cuts for pop/rock indicated casting calls to consider what time period the show takes place in, as it can inform the overall “feel” of the show and what piece(s) might present the best expressive options and opportunities to showcase authentic era-appropriate vocalisms. Sanders offers a list of sixty-seven musicals since Hair that represent pop/rock music in Broadway and Off-Broadway productions 2 . The first successful Broadway musical of the 1990s to feature a majority of songs with original music from any of the three contemporary categories was Rent (1996). Bass roles from pop/rock musicals of earlier eras were few and far between, with Caiaphas in Jesus Christ Superstar being the most prominent example, followed by the low baritone role of Juan Perón from Evita as another creation by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Rent includes a difficult casting challenge in Tom Collins, described as a soulful/gospel low baritone 3 with a notated range in callback materials going from F# 2 -A 4 4 beyond the scope of the guidelines earlier in the document for determining accessible bass-baritone or bass material. The following in-depth analysis focuses on material from three shows from the modern musical era; Once (2012), If/Then (2014), and The SpongeBob Musical (2017). 1 Sheri Sanders, Rock The Audition, 2 nd ed. (self-pub., 2019), 17. 2 Ibid., 52-53. 3 “’Rent’ Nonunion National Tour, Replacements,” Work Light Productions LLC, Backstage, accessed September 2, 2020, https://www.backstage.com/casting/rent-nonunion-national-tour-replacements-196915. 4 “RENT Non-Equity Tour,” Wojcik/Seay Casting, LLC., accessed September 2, 2020, https://wscasting.com/audition_info/rent-non-aea-national-tour/ |
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