The electronic cry: Voice and gender in electroacoustic music

Open Access
Authors
Supervisors
Award date 11-12-2013
ISBN
  • 9789491602177
Number of pages 284
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
The voice provides an entrance to discuss gender and related fundamental issues in electroacoustic music that are relevant as well in other musical genres and outside of music per se: the role of the female voice; the use of language versus non-verbal vocal sounds; the relation of voice, embodiment and gender; the vocal persona; the listener’s position; issues of authorship; ‘écriture féminine’ or feminine style.
A number of electroacoustic compositions is compared to discern patterns with regard to the gender of the composer, the gender of the vocalist and the (non)linguistic character of the gendered vocal sounds. These patterns function as a reference for further close analysis of individual pieces, such as Jean-Claude Risset’s ‘L’autre face’ (1983), Wende Bartley’s ‘Ellipsis’ (1989-1993), Milton Babbitt’s ‘Philomel’ (1963), Lars- Gunnar Bodin’s ‘Anima’ (1984), Alejandro Vinao’s ‘Hildegard’s Dream’ (1994), Luciano Berio’s ‘Thema (Omaggio a Joyce)’ (1958), Paul Lansky’s ‘as it grew dark’ (1983), Larry Austin’s ‘La Barbara: The Name, The Sounds, The Music’ (1991), Christian Marclay’s ‘Maria Callas’ (1988), Gilius van Bergeijk’s ‘Een Lied van Schijn en Weezen’ (1993), Charles Dodge’s ‘Any Resemblance is Purely Coincidental’ (1980), Vivian Adelberg Rudow’s ‘With Love’ (1986), Anne La Berge’s ‘Drive’ (2003), Alison Isadora’s ‘Native Tongue’ (2001), and more, each framed within a specific theoretical approach.
Gender stereotypes are found more in traditional concert stage settings; while the gender breaches occur when the technology has influenced ontological and institutional musical changes (related to composition, concert performance, score, concept of the musical work, media, musical genres and (inter)disciplinarity).
Document type PhD thesis
Note Research conducted at: Universiteit van Amsterdam
Language English
Related publication Foreword
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