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What is barbershop? In simple terms, barbershop harmony is vocal harmony produced by four parts: lead, tenor, baritone and bass. It is different from any other kind of choral or group singing. It is sung a cappella (without instrumental accompaniment), and is one of the most challenging and satisfying forms of music for the singer. ![]() If you want to stay informed of the all the happenings of the female barbershop music scene, subscribe to Pitch Pipe, which is put out by Sweet Adelines International each quarter. It's full of news, reviews, and previews of coming events and competitions. ![]() Lead is the melody; lead singers need to be accurate singers with a full, authoritative sound. All the rest of us match our harmony parts to the lead's melody. Most harmony singers hate to admit it, but the lead really IS the most important part - -after all, it's the melody! ![]() Tenor is a harmony part sung consistently above the lead. Although tenor is the highest voice in barbershop harmony, it should not be confused with soprano of conventional singing groups. The tenor should have a light, clear, pure tone that will compliment, but not overpower, the lead voice.
Baritone covers approximately the same range as lead and is a middle harmony part. The baritone harmony notes cross the lead notes, sometimes sung below and sometimes above. Baritones must constantly adjust their vocal balance to accommodate their position in the chord. The musical line is often quite tricky, like vocal gymnastics. Bass is our low harmony; a bass singer should have a rich, mellow voice. Because the barbershop style calls for basses to sing notes that are strong components of the chords, the bass part is really the foundation of the barbershop sound. Barbershop harmony is characterized by a "cone-shaped" sound, with the lower voices singing a wider, more resonant tone. When all four voices are singing the correct notes, tuning them accurately, producing a tone that is appropriate for their placement in the cone, and matching their vowel sounds, a wonderful thing happens! Those four tones produce a ring or overtone -- a fifth tone that nobody is singing, but that we all can hear. To "lock and ring" a chord is the goal of every barbershop group, and it's sure to bring on the goosebumps and the applause! History of Sweet Adelines International After World War II, barbershop singing was growing increasingly popular for men. In 1945, a small group of women wanted to participate in the chord-ringing, fun-filled harmony that the men were singing. So these women organized "Sweet Adelines in America." From its humble beginnings in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Sweet Adelines International, as it is now called, has grown to a membership of almost 30,000 women in countries all across the globe. |
February 23, 2012
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