Everything about Voice Instrumental Music totally explained
Vocal music is
music performed by one or more
singers, with or without non-vocal
instrumental accompaniment, in which
singing provides the main focus of the piece. Music which employs singing but doesn't feature it prominently is generally considered
instrumental music (for example the wordless women's choir in the final movement of
Holst's
The Planets) as is music without singing. Music without any non-vocal instrumental accompaniment is referred to as
a cappella.
Vocal music typically features sung words called
lyrics, although there are notable examples of vocal music that are performed using non-linguistic syllables or noises, sometimes as musical
onomatopoeia. A short piece of vocal music with lyrics is broadly termed a
song.
Vocal music is probably the oldest form of music, since it doesn't require any instrument besides the
human voice. All musical
cultures have some form of vocal music.
Vocal music without lyrics
World traditions
- Elaborate untexted vocal improvisation was and still is an important element in Turkish and Middle Eastern music traditions. Such music existed prior to the 1200s and the First Crusade into Palestine and the city of Jerusalem, possibly even before the year 900.
- The modern descendants of the ancient Kung tribes and clans of Southern Africa utilize similar traditional music techniques.
- A form of improvisation known as thillana is a very important feature of Carnatic music from South India.
- Tuvan throat singing often features wordless and improvised song. The sygyt technique is a particularly good example of this.
- The Sámi yoik is a predominantly wordless form of vocal expression.
- The musical tradition of mouth music (Puirt á beul) was used in various forms of traditional music in the Anglo-Saxon and Gaelic communities.
- Hasidic Jews use a form of voice improvisation called nigunim. This consists of wordless tunes vocalized with sounds such as "Bim-bim-bam" or "Ai-yai-yai!", often accompanied by rhythmic clapping and drumming on the table.
- Puirt a beul, also known as "Mouth Music", is a Scottish technique based around imitating the sounds of bagpipes, fiddles, and other instruments used in traditional Scottish music. It was popularized in North America by Scottish immigrants, and has been incorporated into many forms of American music from roots music to bluegrass.
European classical vocal music
Solfege, a vocalized musical
scale, assigns various syllables such as
Do-Re-Mi to each note. A variety of similar tools are found in traditional
Indian music, and
scat singing of jazz.
Jazz and popular music
Hip hop music has a very distinct form of vocal percussion known as
beatboxing. It involves creating beats, rhythms, and
scratching.
Icelandic singer/songwriter
Björk album,
Medúlla, is composed entirely of processed and acoustic vocal music. It includes
beatboxing,
choral arrangements and
throat singing.
Singer
Bobby McFerrin has recorded a number of albums using only his voice and body, sometimes consisting of a texted melody supported by untexted vocalizations.
Vocal music with lyrics
Songs
See
Song and for short forms of music with sung words.
Extended techniques that involve lyrics
The
Second Viennese School, especially
Alban Berg and
Arnold Schoenberg, pioneered a technique called
Sprechstimme in which singers half-talk, half-sing, and only approximate pitches.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Voice Instrumental Music'.
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