Never Heard Before: A Musical Exploration of Organ Voicing
Abstract
This dissertation examines the practice of voicing and its implications for musical performance.
Organ sounds are shaped to suit the practice of musical performance, and they influence that
practice in significant ways. This study seeks to describe precisely the role those sounds play
in the context of musical performance and interpretation. More broadly, it examines the visions
and artistic perspectives of those who create the sounds and those who use them in
performance— voicers and musicians.
Pipe sounds are shaped by a practitioner called a voicer, in a process that is essentially one of
gradual transformation of sound; that process is called voicing. The task of voicing demands
excel- lent manual dexterity, solid theoretical knowledge, and a keen sense of hearing. The
name voicing also suggests an approach to sounds that seems to transcend those aspects of
the craft. Voicing means to give voice, and to give voice means to give life. The sounds of the
organ are thus shaped with the intent to epitomize forms of human expression, and those forms
of expression will be heard in the context of a musical practice. Thus: what exactly constitutes
an organ voice? What type of concerns emerge during this process of voicing? In which ways
do the voices that are created influence the music performed on the organ?
The answers to those questions were investigated in the context of a collaboration between a
voicer and an organist (the author), over a period of roughly two years, while an organ was
being built for the concert hall Studio Acusticum at Piteå, in northern Sweden. Since the
researcher was a musician, the research questions are naturally approached from a musical
stance.
This study comes under the umbrella of artistic research, and its results are not only articulated
verbally, but also, and just as importantly, enacted through artistic content. The dissertation includes
the creation of new artworks, and the exploration of artistic media. The ethnographic
model is clearly felt within the text as well, as it deals mostly with examination of documents,
dialogues, sounds, events, and the perspectives of different people.
The title of the dissertation—Never Heard Before—was originally the motto for the new Studio
Acusticum organ, that served as a platform for the study. Here it serves to express the idea that
the voicer-musician encounter has not previously been the subject of research, and that the
mate- rials presented in the text—both the dialogues and the sounds collected during the
process of voicing—were things never heard before.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
Academy of Music and Drama ; Högskolan för scen och musik
Disputation
Lördagen 28 februari 2015, kl. 11.00, Studio Acusticum, Piteå
Date of defence
2015-02-28
joao.segurado@ltu.se
Other description
The dissertation includes a DVD with sound examples, recordings of organ music, and an original composition by the author.
View/ Open
Date
2015-02-09Author
Segurado, João
Keywords
voicing
voicing
sound
listening
pipe
organ
tone
musical composition
musical performance
experimental
collaboration
artistic research
ethnography
musique concrète
transient
attack
steady-state,
harmonic spectrum
languid
toe-hole
mouth
flue
reed
Studio Acusticum
Gerald Woehl
Piteå
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-981712-6-6 (printed version)
978-91-981712-7-3 (PDF/GUPEA)
Series/Report no.
Art Monitor
51
Language
eng