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Encyclopedia > Sprechstimme

Sprechgesang (German for "speech song") or Sprechstimme ("speech voice") is a technique of vocal production halfway between singing and speaking. Since the end of the 19th century, it has sometimes been called for by composers of classical music.


In the foreword to Pierrot Lunaire (1912), Schoenberg explains how a good Sprechgesang should be achieved, saying that the indicated rhythms should be adhered to, but that whereas in ordinary singing a constant pitch is maintained through a note, in Sprechgesang the indicated pitch should be given, but then immediately left, either by rising or falling. The result should be unlike both normal singing and normal speech.


The earliest known use of the technique is in Engelbert Humperdinck's opera Königskinder (1897), but it is more closely associated with the composers of the Second Viennese School. Arnold Schoenberg asks for the technique in a number of pieces: the part of the Speaker in Gurrelieder (1911) is in Sprechgesang, almost all of Pierrot Lunaire (1912) uses the technique, and it is also employed in his opera Moses und Aron (1932). Alban Berg uses a variation on the technique, asking for parts of his operas Wozzeck and Lulu to be between Sprechgesang and normal singing.


Kurt Weill adopted Sprechstimme to accommodate Lotte Lenya's distinctive, though non-lyric, voice for her part as Jenny in Die Dreigroschenoper. Macheath's part also employs the technique.


In musical notation, Sprechgesang is usually indicated by small crosses through the stems of the notes, or with the note head itself being a small cross. The beginning of the vocal part in Pierrot Lunaire looks like this:


The beginning of the vocal part in "Mondestrunken"


Berg's part-Sprechgesang, part-singing is notated with a single stroke through the stems of the notes.


In Germany today, since the early 1990s, the term Sprechgesang has been given a new, more popular meaning of "German-language rap music."


See also

External link

  • A translation of Schoenberg's foreword to Pierrot Lunaire (http://gigue.peabody.jhu.edu/~mathews/Pierrot/PLNotes/PLFront.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Byron, The Test Pressings of Schoenberg Conducting Pierrot lunaire (9805 words)
Sprechstimme in Pierrot lunaire has an in-built demand for interpretation by the performer; and when this is denied by performers, Schoenberg saw it as a misinterpretation of his music.
In Moses und Aron he points to the fact that Sprechstimme is beyond the twelve tones, and that the singer should extract from the notation the expression (as opposed to singing the exact pitches).
This, and the fact that places that collide with the score are consistent, suggests that she was working consciously or unconsciously with a performative contour that does not correspond to or deviate entirely from that of the score.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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