East Meets West (and everything in between!)

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East Meets West (and everything in between!). Different Ways of Singing Throughout the World. Introduction. Some Westerners think Chinese singers sound like squeaky brakes on a car . Some Chinese think Western singers sound like they’re singing in a box . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Introduction

• Some Westerners think Chinese singers sound like squeaky brakes on a car.

• Some Chinese think Western singers sound like they’re singing in a box.

• There are real differences; are the differences genetic or cultural? Are they different because of the different languages, or perhaps even because of the weather?

Hue’er

• Hue’er, a type of shan'ge, is widely popular in the eight minorities including Hui, Han, Tu, Dongxiang, Bao'an, Sala, Tibetan and Yugu in four provinces – Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia and Xinjiang.

• The tune of hua'er is called "ling" (a pattern to which the tune is set).

• It has maintained a good reputation going back to the Qianlong Period of the Qing Dynasty.

Opera – Chinese and Western

• Chinese– Singing style – toward the front of the throat—sharper,

more distinct tone– Traditional music– Performance very stylized

• Western– Singing style – toward the back of the throat—deeper,

richer tone– Original composed music– Varied performance styles

Jazz Singers

• Louis Armstrong (“Satchmo”)– Pioneer in solo jazz performance.– One of the first scat singers (vocalizing using

sounds and syllables instead of actual lyrics).• Ella Fitzgerald– “Queen of Jazz;” “First Lady of Song”– Three octave range– Renown scat singer