Artigo Revisado por pares

Polyvocally perverse; or, the disintegrating pleasures of singing along

2012; Intellect; Volume: 6; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1386/smt.6.1.89_1

ISSN

1750-3167

Autores

Derek Miller,

Tópico(s)

Music History and Culture

Resumo

Contemporary philosophies of voice, like theories of the musical, rely on integration. But sound resists contextualization, integration, and wholeness. Embracing the exhilarating possibilities of vocal play, I read Stephen De Rosa’s performance of a community theatre troupe’s version of ‘The Baseball Game’ from Falsettos as a sign of the inherent multiplicity of voice. In De Rosa’s vocal agility, I hear a transgression of the integrated voice and the assumption of a polyvocality in which voice refuses the claims of a singular, corporeal identity. But, like the musical, voice can find strength in disintegration. Singing along to cast albums – which, although they separate the sound from the show, permit the musical to reach a broader audience than productions alone – fans find pleasure in a cacophonous polyvocality that our voices are always ready to unleash, if only we set them free.

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