Bel Canto: A History of Vocal Pedagogy

Front Cover
University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 1999 - Music - 325 pages

In this well documented and highly readable book, James Stark provides a history of vocal pedagogy from the beginning of the bel canto tradition of solo singing in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries to the present. Using a nineteenth-century treatise by Manuel Garcia as his point of reference, Stark analyses the many sources that discuss singing techniques and selects a number of primary vocal 'problems' for detailed investigation. He also presents data from a series of laboratory experiments carried out to demonstrate the techniques of bel canto.

The discussion deals extensively with such topics as the emergence of virtuoso singing, the castrato phenomenon, national differences in singing styles, controversies regarding the perennial decline in the art of singing, and the so-called secrets of bel canto.

Stark offers a new definition of bel canto which reconciles historical and scientific descriptions of good singing. His is a refreshing and profound discussion of issues important to all singers and voice teachers.

 

Contents

III
3
IV
7
V
11
VI
12
VII
14
VIII
20
IX
24
X
28
XLVIII
121
XLIX
123
L
130
LI
134
LII
137
LIII
138
LV
140
LVI
142

XI
29
XII
30
XIII
33
XIV
34
XV
36
XVI
41
XVII
42
XVIII
45
XIX
47
XX
51
XXI
55
XXII
57
XXIII
58
XXIV
64
XXV
67
XXVI
73
XXVII
75
XXVIII
76
XXIX
81
XXX
82
XXXI
84
XXXII
85
XXXIII
86
XXXIV
88
XXXV
89
XXXVI
90
XXXVII
91
XXXVIII
93
XXXIX
95
XL
96
XLI
99
XLII
106
XLIII
111
XLIV
114
XLV
116
XLVI
117
XLVII
118
LVII
143
LVIII
144
LIX
146
LX
150
LXI
153
LXIII
154
LXIV
156
LXV
160
LXVI
162
LXVII
163
LXIX
167
LXX
169
LXXI
173
LXXII
176
LXXIII
180
LXXIV
183
LXXV
188
LXXVI
189
LXXVII
190
LXXVIII
197
LXXIX
204
LXXX
216
LXXXI
225
LXXXII
227
LXXXIII
230
LXXXIV
234
LXXXV
236
LXXXVI
238
LXXXVII
240
LXXXVIII
245
LXXXIX
246
XC
253
XCI
257
XCII
259
XCIII
267
XCIV
301
Copyright

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About the author (1999)

James Stark is a singer, vocal instructor and musicologist, with a lifelong interest in vocal pedagogy. He has taught for the last twenty-five years at Mount Allison University in New Brunswick.

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