The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production; (The Old Italian School of Singing) Indisensable to Singers, Elocutionists, Educators and to All (Paperback)
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The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production The Old Italian School of Singing Indisensable to Singers, Elocutionists, Educators and to All (1897)
EN PB NW
ISBN: 9781231156469 bzw. 1231156465, in Englisch, RareBooksClub.com, Taschenbuch, neu.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, BuySomeBooks [52360437], Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 94 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.2in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: . . . puss, sugar, pulpit: (This is a very short w-sound. ) 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc. --The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called Yankee a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc. --This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short . This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc. --To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN.
This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 94 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.2in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: . . . puss, sugar, pulpit: (This is a very short w-sound. ) 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc. --The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called Yankee a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc. --This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short . This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc. --To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN.
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The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production; (The Old Italian School of Singing) Indisensable to Singers, Elocutionists, Educators and to All (2012)
EN PB NW
ISBN: 9781231156469 bzw. 1231156465, in Englisch, 94 Seiten, RareBooksClub.com, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 24 hours.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 7547924.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 7547924.
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The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production; (The Old Italian School of Singing) Indisensable to Singers, Elocutionists, Educators and to All (2012)
EN PB US
ISBN: 9781231156469 bzw. 1231156465, in Englisch, 94 Seiten, RareBooksClub.com, Taschenbuch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 1-2 business days.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, super_star_seller.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 7547924.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, super_star_seller.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 7547924.
4
The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production; (The Old Italian School of Singing) Indisensable to Singers, Elocutionists, Educators and to All (2012)
EN PB NW
ISBN: 9781231156469 bzw. 1231156465, in Englisch, 94 Seiten, RareBooksClub.com, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 9705788.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...puss, sugar, pulpit: (This « _ is a very short w-sound.) § 43. The Short Vowels. There are six short vowels--a, as in bat; e, as in let; i, as in hit; d, as in not; u, as in cut; and 00 as in book. A, as in Bat, Rat, Waft, Amber, Patent, Shall, etc.--The pronunciation of this vowel in singing must be determined by the musical ear. The so-called "Yankee " a is the least fit for a musical tone. In order 'to find the most pleasing musical sound for the short a and yet be distinctly understood, put the mouth and tongue into the exact shape and position described for the long vowel aa; then modulate into a gentle smile and pronounce with a very light, short throw of air the same vowel, and you will have a musical short A. E, as in Let, Met, Ferret, Legend, Rend, Pet, Set, etc.--This vowel is also learned by a process similar to the preceding one. Let the lips assume a smiling position as in practicing the long vowel A. Then make the opening a little rounder and produce the d as a very short sound; the result will be the short /. This vowel-sound is also represented by the following characters: a--many, any; u--bury, buried; ae--Michaelmas; EA---feather, head, jealous, read; eo--leopard, jeopard; ue--guess; ai--said; ie---friend. I, as in Hit, Spirit, Split, Film, Finger, Singer, etc.--To produce the short 1, read again what has been said of the position for the long vowel ee; let the lips assume a complete smile, produce ee with a very light, quick throw of air, and you will find that you have pronounced a short i. The reader will conclude that I believe the difference between these two short vowels and their corresponding long ones, d and e, ee and i, is one of duration only, and not of sound. I have argued this point with many students of t... Paperback, Label: RareBooksClub.com, RareBooksClub.com, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-10, Studio: RareBooksClub.com, Verkaufsrang: 9705788.
5
Symbolbild
The Art of Breathing as the Basis of Tone-Production; (the Old Italian School of Singing) Indisensab (2012)
EN PB US
ISBN: 9781231156469 bzw. 1231156465, in Englisch, RareBooksClub. com, Taschenbuch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, zzgl. Versandkosten, Versandgebiet: DOM.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, More Books, FL, MIAMI, [RE:3].
Paperback.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, More Books, FL, MIAMI, [RE:3].
Paperback.
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