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Dark tone quality and vocal tract shaping in soprano song production: Insights from real-time MRI
Author(s) -
Elisabeth Lynn,
Shrikanth Narayanan,
Adam C. Lammert
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jasa express letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2691-1191
DOI - 10.1121/10.0005109
Subject(s) - vocal tract , formant , tone (literature) , speech production , quality (philosophy) , larynx , audiology , communication , psychology , speech recognition , acoustics , computer science , medicine , physics , anatomy , linguistics , vowel , philosophy , quantum mechanics
Tone quality termed “dark” is an aesthetically important property of Western classical voice performance and has been associated with lowered formant frequencies, lowered larynx, and widened pharynx. The present study uses real-time magnetic resonance imaging with synchronous audio recordings to investigate dark tone quality in four professionally trained sopranos with enhanced ecological validity and a relatively complete view of the vocal tract. Findings differ from traditional accounts, indicating that labial narrowing may be the primary driver of dark tone quality across performers, while many other aspects of vocal tract shaping are shown to differ significantly in a performer-specific way.

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