Before and after. Correction of gestural and expressional misunderstandings in orchestral conducting
Abstract
The conductor of an orchestra is a central figure. He inspires musicians during rehearsals and leads them during performance. The main way how a conductor expresses his ideas comes from
his nonverbal language and this study investigates the professional nonverbal language of a conductor.
The purpose of this study is to discover whether there is a difference in nonverbal language of a conductor after spotting misunderstandings during a rehearsal. During an orchestra rehearsal, a
conductor stops the orchestra and gives some comments to musicians and then they repeat the same bars one more time. The research interest here is to find out whether the conductor repeats his movements after the stop and if not, what the difference in his nonverbal language is.
For this study there was chosen a video recording approach and a quantitative method where all gestures are counted, encoded and expressed as a percentage. The data was recorded during two
different opera rehearsals with two different conductors at the Göteborg Opera, Sweden.
The findings reveal that after the stop both conductors increased using gaze and deictic gestures in both hands. However, they reduce the use of head and posture movements. At the same time
conductors increase expressiveness of the left hand. First conductor emphasizes time beating that comes from the march genre while second conductor increases the vibrato effect that emphasizes the lyrical side of the opera.
Degree
Master theses
View/ Open
Date
2013-09-17Author
Gorokhovska, Iuliia
Keywords
communication
nonverbal language
conductor
music
video analysis
quantitative
theatre
Series/Report no.
1651-4769
2011:084
Language
eng