Themes > Arts > Music > Vocal Music > A Brief History of Singing

By John Koopman

Change, in the history of Western solo vocal performance, has arisen from a variety of unlikely causes. Far from actively guiding the evolution of their art, most composers and singers have been content to simply respond to the challenges and opportunities presented by ever changing circumstance. Thus a conventional approach to the subject, surveying the music written for solo voice, would show the effect rather than the cause of the changes. Hopefully the approach taken here, primarily tracing the development of opera, will be more revealing. For as Paul Bekker pointed out in his book, The Changing Opera, "...the singing voice is the root from which the opera has sprouted and grown...the form of the opera arises from the voice; it becomes physically perceptible in such shape as is dictated by the development of the voice...the history of opera becomes the history of the voice."
A comprehensive history of singing is yet to be written, and this brief piece is but an introduction to the subject. In the interest of concision it has been necessary to simplify or omit much of importance, and those interested in more detail are encouraged to use this work as a point of departure. A bibliography of readily available English-language materials has been provided for this purpose. A glossary of the terms which first appear in the text in upper case letters will be found at the end of each section.

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