Voice teacher

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A voice teacher or singing teacher is a musical instructor who assists adults and children in the development of their abilities in singing.[1]

Typical work

A voice teacher works with a student singer to improve the various skills involved in singing.[2]

These skills include breath control and support,

faculty
.

Roles

Students usually start vocal instruction after their voices have settled in later teen years. Part of the job of any voice teacher is to know a student's vocal characteristics sufficiently well to identify their

bass. However, more mature and experienced singers who have completed their professional training can usually benefit from ongoing vocal instruction. At this point it is often referred to as vocal coaching. A vocal coach may help a student to learn new repertoire or assist the student to learn diction in different languages.[8] Vocal coaches may also help vocalists to improve their singing
technique, take care of and develop their voice, and prepare for the performance of a song or other work.

Training and experience

The training and education of singing teachers varies widely.

The Boston Conservatory, the music conservatory at Shenandoah University, and Westminster Choir College, and there are programs as several large universities, such as Arizona State University, the University of North Texas, Ohio State University, and the University of Iowa
.

On the other hand, some singing teachers may have little formal training, and so they rely on their extensive experience as a performer. For example, some singers had decades of solo stage experience prior to becoming singing teachers, in recitals, oratorios, operas, operettas, or musical theater.

Singing teachers may also come to their profession through related musical professions. Some singing teachers began as rehearsal pianists and they gained decades of experience accompanying singers in different styles. As well, some singing teachers learn their craft by starting as choral, music theater, or symphony conductors.

The singing teacher field is competitive, especially at the highest professional levels. Salaries vary greatly, as do the conditions of work. While a small number of top singing teachers can command very high hourly or daily rates, most singing teachers, like most other music and arts professionals, tend to have salaries which are below the average for other professions which require a similar amount of education and experience, such as economists or bank managers. The work conditions vary widely, from part-time or occasional freelance work teaching individual singers, to full-time contracts or multi-year jobs for universities teaching vocal performance students.

Notable people

Footnotes

  1. ^ See the dictionary definitions of both "voice" and "teacher"
  2. Voice pedagogy
    , such as Vennard, "Singing: the Mechanism and the Technic" and Miller, The Structure of Singing.
  3. ^ Miller, chapters 1 and 2; Vennard, chapter 2
  4. ^ Miller, chapters 6 and 7; Vennard, chapter 5
  5. ^ Miller, chapters 5 and 10; Vennard, chapters 6 and 7
  6. ^ Miller, chapters 9 and 10; Vennard, chapter 4
  7. ^ JOURNAL ARTICLE 'On The Voice: Vocal Health for the Music Teacher'by Mary J. Sandage
  8. ^ For more information, refer to the separate article on Vocal coach.
  9. ^ For more on the professional training of voice teachers, see Section Three of Blades-Zeller, A Spectrum of Voices, pp. 195–231

References

  • Blades-Zeller, Elizabeth (2002). A Spectrum of Voices: Prominent American Voice Teachers Discuss the Teaching of Singing. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, Inc. .
  • .
  • Miller, Richard (1986). The Structure of Singing: System and Art in Vocal Technique. New York: Schirmer Books. .
  • Vennard, William (1967). Singing: the Mechanism and the Technic (Revised Edition, Greatly Enlarged ed.). New York: Carl Fischer.
  • .