Department of Psychology, University of Buckingham Buckingham, UK.
Centre for Music Performance Research, Royal Northern College of Music Manchester, UK.
Front Psychol. 2014 Sep 4;5:809. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00809. eCollection 2014.
Singing is universal, and understanding sung words is thought to be important for many listeners' enjoyment of vocal and choral music. However, this is not a trivial task, and sung text intelligibility is probably affected by many factors. A survey of musicians was undertaken to identify the factors believed to have most impact on intelligibility, and to assess the importance of understanding sung words in familiar and unfamiliar languages. A total of 143 professional and amateur musicians, including singers, singing teachers, and regular listeners to vocal music, provided 394 statements yielding 851 references to one or more of 43 discrete factors in four categories: performer-related, listener-related, environment-related and words/music-related. The factors mentioned most frequently in each of the four categories were, respectively: diction; hearing ability; acoustic; and genre. In more than a third of references, the extent to which sung text is intelligible was attributed to the performer. Over 60% of respondents rated the ability to understand words in familiar languages as "very important," but only 17% when the text was in an unfamiliar language. Professional musicians (47% of the sample) rated the importance of understanding in both familiar and unfamiliar languages significantly higher than amateurs but listed fewer factors overall and fewer listener-related factors. The more important the respondents rated understanding, the more performer-related and environment-related factors they tended to list. There were no significant differences between the responses of those who teach singing and those who do not. Enhancing sung text intelligibility is thus perceived to be within the singer's control, at least to some extent, but there are also many factors outside their control. Empirical research is needed to explore some of these factors in greater depth, and has the potential to inform pedagogy for singers, composers, and choral directors.
唱歌是普遍存在的,理解歌词被认为对许多听众欣赏声乐和合唱音乐很重要。然而,这并非易事,歌词的可理解度可能受到许多因素的影响。我们对音乐家进行了一项调查,以确定他们认为对可理解度影响最大的因素,并评估理解熟悉和不熟悉语言中的歌词的重要性。共有 143 名专业和业余音乐家,包括歌手、声乐教师和声乐音乐的常客,提供了 394 条陈述,共涉及 43 个离散因素中的 851 个参考项,这些因素分为四个类别:与表演者相关、与听众相关、与环境相关和与歌词/音乐相关。每个类别中被提及最多的因素分别是:发音;听力能力;音响效果;和音乐类型。在四个类别中,超过三分之一的参考提到,歌词的可理解程度归因于表演者。超过 60%的受访者认为理解熟悉语言中的歌词“非常重要”,但当歌词是不熟悉的语言时,只有 17%的人认为重要。专业音乐家(占样本的 47%)对理解熟悉和不熟悉语言的重要性的评价明显高于业余音乐家,但总体而言,他们列出的因素较少,而且听众相关的因素较少。受访者对理解的评价越重要,他们越倾向于列出更多与表演者和环境相关的因素。教授唱歌的人和不教授唱歌的人之间的反应没有显著差异。因此,提高歌词的可理解度被认为至少在一定程度上是在歌手的控制范围内的,但也有许多超出他们控制范围的因素。需要进行实证研究以更深入地探讨其中的一些因素,这有可能为歌手、作曲家和合唱指挥提供教学法方面的信息。