ABSTRACT

By integrating theoretical approaches to the female voice with the musicological investigation of female singers’ practices, the contributors to this volume offer fresh viewpoints on the material, symbolic and cultural aspects of the female voice in the twentieth century. Various styles and genres are covered, including Western art music, experimental composition, popular music, urban folk and jazz. The volume offers a substantial and innovative appraisal of the role of the female voice from the perspective of twentieth-century performance practices, the centrality of female singers’ experimentations and extended vocal techniques along with the process of the ‘subjectivisation’ of the voice.

part 1|80 pages

The ‘voice’ and the voices: definitions, iconologies, myths and practices

chapter 1|8 pages

Vocalising honey

chapter 5|20 pages

How female is the voice?

Conceptualisations and practices

part 2|112 pages

The grain of the voices, experimentation and technology

chapter 6|19 pages

Love, race and resistance

The fugitive voice of Nina Simone1

chapter 7|15 pages

Black sonic refusal

chapter 8|19 pages

The voice that gives voice

Female folk revival singers around 1968

chapter 10|16 pages

‘Hear what I Feel’

Joan La Barbara, the 1970s and the ‘extended voice’

chapter 11|21 pages

Remediating the female voice in extremis(m)

The Human Voice (1966)