21 Feb 13 - 07:59 PM (#3482243) Subject: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D I have been recently (last year or so) 'bothered' by some of the vocal patterns and inflections of some youngish female TV news anchors. Alex Wagner of MSNBC was the one that caused me to Google the issue. Turns out it is a well known and documented phenomenon. My original search was "young women" "raspy voices" and LO! Many hits... What is really noted is famous entertainers I don't see much of, like Brittny Spears and a Kardashian or two...etc. But a little looking at links shows it is kinda common. Scientific American article from this article at Huffington Post Why worry about it? In the case of TV news, it simply distracts me from what they are saying. (Alex Wagner is a pretty smart graduate of a high school here in the Wash DC area, and she is far from the worse I have heard, but I still cringe.) Contrast these with Kelly O'Donnell, an NBC Pentagon correspondent, who is always clear & pleasant. I realize that 'some' aspects of a person's voice are beyond easy control, and those who employ vocal fry and similar sounds may have gone beyond being even ABLE to change.... but I wish stations saw this as an issue and gave on-air positions to those didn't rasp and 'vibrate' when they speak. (Before you tell ME I'm overreacting, read those articles.) |
21 Feb 13 - 08:22 PM (#3482251) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Is that the sped-up bullfrog sound? Sheesh. Never knew what it was called. |
21 Feb 13 - 08:26 PM (#3482252) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D Bullfrog? *shrug* It is just a low, vibrating rasp in 'ordinary' speech..often coupled with rising inflection at the end of sentences. (which has been mentioned in thread before). Almost never heard in older women.... |
21 Feb 13 - 08:28 PM (#3482253) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bev and Jerry We couldn't figure out what "vocal fry" sounds like from the articles but here is a very clear example. Bev and Jerry |
21 Feb 13 - 08:39 PM (#3482254) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: McGrath of Harlow That and quacking. Thank God for remote controls. Do they actually talk like that in real life or is it put on for performances like a kind of make-up? |
21 Feb 13 - 08:48 PM (#3482256) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Bev and Jerry, thank you. Sounds like a 1980 Valley girl who's been further lobotomized. That the sped up bullfrog thing I was talkin' about. |
21 Feb 13 - 08:49 PM (#3482257) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 McGrath of Harlow: I understand from something I read a few days back that it will be the new BBC standard. |
21 Feb 13 - 09:07 PM (#3482260) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Jeri Oddly enough, I hardly notice it. I listened to the Scientific American and didn't really react to anything until the announcer said that young women might do it to imitate their "fellow peers". I found that term a bit overly redundant. |
21 Feb 13 - 09:28 PM (#3482262) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Ebbie Not only redundant but repeated unnecessarily. :) When I was a kid we - my brothers and I - sometimes communicated that way. Using no intelligible words we 'creaked' in each other's faces. Never knew there was a phrase for it. (And I just now tried to replicate it and discovered I no longer can.) That phenomenon hasn't bothered me - up to now. It will probably become a sore point forthwith - what does bother me is the habit some public personages, not only female, have to kind of squeeze their voices out as they speak. What's up with that! Oh, I must ask: Who names these phenomena? "vocal fry? |
21 Feb 13 - 09:42 PM (#3482270) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D Just to clarify...those extreme examples used by Kardashians and others are just that.. extreme. Alex Wagner sounds like she got 'it' a few years ago in school, but is now just trying to sound like a 'perky', 'with it' educated young woman...leading to residual vocal affectations that even she is not aware of. What I wonder is IF network executives who choose these women are aware of the vocal issues, and (intentionally or not) lean toward those who exhibit a trendy sound. |
21 Feb 13 - 10:06 PM (#3482272) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Alice Yes, Bill, I heard on NPR a report on vocal fry in 2011. The study was reported in The Journal Of Voice in 2011. http://www.jvoice.org/article/S0892-1997%2811%2900070-1/abstract It annoys me when I hear it. Alice |
22 Feb 13 - 01:16 AM (#3482306) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Seamus Kennedy Bill - thanks for teaching me the name of this phenomenon. It's bothered me for years too, and some teenage boys do it as well. |
22 Feb 13 - 01:21 AM (#3482308) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Seamus Kennedy The Scientific American article mentioned that it is not found in me, but I've heard young male country singers do it masked as a drawl, but it's definitely a vocal fry. |
22 Feb 13 - 03:10 PM (#3482560) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,pete from seven stars link i thought it was a vocal exercise used by singers to expand their range and by starting low and slowly going higher work toward the very high warbling sound. |
22 Feb 13 - 05:16 PM (#3482608) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Seamus Kennedy I meant "men". not "me"! I think it's an attempt by young women in the TV news industry to ape the "gravitas" of older male newscasters, such as Walter Cronkite, by artificially deepening their voices. Then it filters down to other women such as college and high-school students. |
22 Feb 13 - 05:38 PM (#3482614) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,Stim It's a regionalism, not a "bad habit", unless all you Canadians figure that your "oot" thing is a a bad habit, or all you UKers think that funny thing you do with your R's is a speech defect(which I don't, so you don't need to get snippy about it). It does have a function, which is to provide definition for speech (and singing) in the lower ranges so that it carries better. As those of us with lower voices know, it takes a lot more air to keep your level even in the low ranges than in the high ones. If I were to speculate, I would say that women in broadcasting use it because it helps keep their volume level even in the lower voice range. Nothing worse than having the bottom drop out at the end of your sentences. And of course, since many of us are addicted to broadcast media, the way people speak in the media affects the way we speak. I am sure some of you will disagree strongly with my speculations. This is, after all, a life and death issue that merits full examination. |
22 Feb 13 - 05:43 PM (#3482618) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,leeneia Vocal fry - you mean I've been worrying that my young neighbor is going to get throat cancer, but all it is a fad? I hope so, anyhow. |
22 Feb 13 - 06:44 PM (#3482636) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D *grin*... more than a 'fad'. It's become a routine sound, like saying 'like' every 4th word, and barely realizing it. The young girls copy the 'cool' ones and the famous ones and some do it 'better' than others. I suspect that VERY few consciously employ it for specific vocal enhancement. Perhaps a few in broadcasting try for a lower sound, but many end up with just the raspy vibration in their usual register. |
22 Feb 13 - 07:23 PM (#3482661) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: bobad "unless all you Canadians figure that your "oot" thing is a a bad habit" I've always wondered where that association of Canadians and that "oot" thing comes from. I am Canadian and have traveled the country from coast to coast and not once have I heard that pronunciation of the word out. Are you sure you're not confusing us with the Scots? |
22 Feb 13 - 07:48 PM (#3482673) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 I too have never heard a Canadian say oot. Found the following on the www. 'Canadian pronunciation of "out and about" Americans typically make fun of Canadians, claiming that "out and about" is pronounced as "oot and aboot" (personally I can't hear it). So if that is the case, what do Americans hear when Canadians actually say "oot and aboot"? What does Canadian "boot" sound like to an American?' My own question: does boot and out sound the same to you when we say it? |
22 Feb 13 - 08:11 PM (#3482678) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D I hear 'something' that is not quite 'oot'.... kind of a slurred rising inflection in "about" that avoids the 'w' sound. (it is similar to the German pronunciation of W in water. It is not an "F" or a "V" but an in between sound that we hear as F or V. |
22 Feb 13 - 08:16 PM (#3482680) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu "Vocal fry" and the video.... thank you!!! It's about time this scourge was identified, classified and named so the BILLIONS of pissed off people can join the fray to tell young girls(and lads)... stop fucking singing when you talk you brain dead little ******. I might add... if you keep doing that, I would like to kick your ass if you keep that inane shit up!!! What is going on? These kids can't even speak properly because they have so much insecurity they NEED to talk like an idiot? |
22 Feb 13 - 08:27 PM (#3482683) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bobert We gotta a bunch of 'um here in Charlotte but worse... Not only do they sound like frogs but half of them have this irritating staccato cadence to wind down their sentences... What's that about, anyway... B~ |
22 Feb 13 - 09:20 PM (#3482696) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,Stim One thing to remember is that what we hear when you speak is not necessarily what you hear. We (and by that I mean me) hear the difference between the way we say something and the way you say it. That means that you can listen to yourselves night and day for a year and have no idea what it sounds like to me(I mean us). Which is probably as it should be. I grew up in Michigan, and spent time in Canada, and even worked in Canada with actual Canadians. I can tell you right now that, though in a couple places we are actually only a walking distance apart, we talk real different. For one thing, you are careful about the sound of letters like "t". Not us. We tend to use a glottal stop instead. That would be the sound of the hyphen in "uh-oh!" In music, it would be a stacatto rest. We also stretch out our vowels, sometimes for two or three syllables. Usually just two. And there is a certain nasality. If one were pressed for a description, with a view toward helping someone identify it, I would suggest imagining a person with a sinus infection talking to a deaf person. So we hear "oot" because we're used to "oww' ". |
22 Feb 13 - 09:27 PM (#3482697) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,Stim I missed your posts, Bobert and Gnu. What it's about is that pronunciations have changed, and you haven't. |
22 Feb 13 - 09:37 PM (#3482700) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Without resorting to the IPA, we have reached an impasse. Years back I recall a linguistic anthropologist telling us that people from different cultures heard roosters' crows differently. On the off-chance I'd find something on Mr Google I looked. Voila! |
22 Feb 13 - 09:44 PM (#3482706) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 PS: As a Canadian, I am not at all offended by any of this. (Of course, as most of the world knows, Canadians are seldom offended by anything, and when we are we apologize at once.) It's interesting more than anything else. |
22 Feb 13 - 09:53 PM (#3482709) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,Stim That would be another difference, Bruce. Americans tend to be offended by everything;-) As far as the roosters, it was explained to me that linguistic anthropologists hear things differently. So... |
22 Feb 13 - 10:12 PM (#3482716) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 LOLOL |
22 Feb 13 - 10:19 PM (#3482717) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D Dogs bark differently in French & Russian also... |
22 Feb 13 - 10:25 PM (#3482719) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu "What it's about is that pronunciations have changed, and you haven't." I will never listen to a brain dead, ill educated little twerp chirp when it talks and accept it. I refuse to accept that human beings talking like lilting birds is something, *I* should "change" to accept. It's not about pronunciations. It's about speech. I talk... they sing... I think it's poor upbringing and poor education. |
22 Feb 13 - 10:59 PM (#3482725) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Ebbie As to 'oot', all I can say is that when I hear a speaker say 'hoooose' I know s/he is Canadian. I like it. I like accents. |
22 Feb 13 - 11:05 PM (#3482726) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 To most Canucks--I think--house rhymes with louse or spouse. |
22 Feb 13 - 11:12 PM (#3482727) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Ahem: an unfortunate choice though I say so myself. I meant to say grouse or spouse. |
22 Feb 13 - 11:16 PM (#3482728) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST Uh, one more time: mouse or grouse. Yep, that'll do it. |
23 Feb 13 - 12:35 AM (#3482739) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Seamus Kennedy Oh, and while we're on the subject, and not to hijack Bill's thread - the new and current trend among young Americans, male and female, to employ the glottal stop instead of pronouncing the letter "t" in the middle of words. Or Glo'al stop. If you're not from Glasgow or London where you grew up using it, please stop. BTW, isn't it weird that those who use the glottal stop can't pronounce their affliction? Like folks with a lisp. |
23 Feb 13 - 12:40 AM (#3482743) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Seamus Kennedy Stim - misssed your post. I have no problem with the glottal stop when it's a regionalism, but the tendency among today's yoof to put it on to be trendy is grating to my aging ears. |
23 Feb 13 - 03:18 AM (#3482761) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Ebbie Ah, but 9, how do Canadians pronounce louse, spouse, grouse and mouse? :) |
23 Feb 13 - 07:02 AM (#3482802) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Will Fly Well now - I'll solve the"ou" Canadian pronunciation mystery. I was brought up as a boy in the area around the Lancashire (UK) town of Bolton. The way they pronounce a phrase like "brown trousers" is unique to that area - but almost exactly as Canadians also pronounce it. The corollary of this argument is that all Canadians are descended from Boltonians - and, by the same token, I'm therefore an honorary Canadian. Hi folks! |
23 Feb 13 - 07:27 AM (#3482808) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 "Ah, but 9, how do Canadians pronounce louse, spouse, grouse and mouse? :)" Same as house, Ebbie. |
23 Feb 13 - 08:18 AM (#3482828) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu Stop grousing. "... Canadians are descended from Boltonians - and, by the same token, I'm therefore an honorary Canadian. Hi folks!" Welcome, fellow Bolthead. Some Canucks are boltholes, but we shant drift that far. |
23 Feb 13 - 10:32 PM (#3483140) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: McGrath of Harlow Do Americans find it as hard to distinguish between, say Scots and Yorkshire as people back here do to tell someone is Canadian rather than from the USA? ............. If it was just swallowed T, that would be tolerable. It's when it spreads to other consonants in the middle of words that it gets over the limit of comprehensibility. K, even G and P. Some people seem to dispense with consonants almost entirely. I've sometimes sat on the train hearing a conversation, and speculated what strange foreign language it might be (the next but one station is Stansted Airport) and then the penny drops, it's English. And I still can't understand it. And these aren't immigrants. |
24 Feb 13 - 02:21 PM (#3483315) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: frogprince 999, I'm just a tad surprised to hear that you've never heard any Canadians who do a little cleaning up aboot the hoose. I spent a year just above the Minnesota border in Ontario, and it was quite common there. I took it that there was quite a bit of Scottish ancestry in the locale, and thought that it might have hung on from that. I'm kinda trying to play back a little of your own speech in my head, and not remembering much distinction from USAan midwestern. Probably at least some subtle stuff, but no enough to stick in mind. |
25 Feb 13 - 11:14 AM (#3483557) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Hey, frogprince. I've heart it from imported Scots, but never from second or third generation Canadians. Course, I ain't heard everyone yet. Take the sound of the el from shell. Put a t on that sound. That would nearly rhyme with the way we say out. In the following video, the kid nails us saying out and about at 1:01 and 1:02. I can't see how anyone gets oot and aboot from that. Say hi to the boss for me. I hope things are good. |
25 Feb 13 - 11:18 AM (#3483560) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 OK, so I forgot the link. |
25 Feb 13 - 11:18 AM (#3483561) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: bobad I want to see that video. |
25 Feb 13 - 11:25 AM (#3483563) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: bobad That's the way I hear it too but maybe our American friends hear differently. BTW he doesn't pronounce "bagel" (at least that's what I think he is saying) the way I do and hear. |
25 Feb 13 - 11:36 AM (#3483566) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 I stopped at out and about. Just listened to the bagel part. I think you and I would rhyme bagel with BAY-gull and he seems to be saying BEG-ull. And you too say hi to the boss for me. |
25 Feb 13 - 12:59 PM (#3483592) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Richard Bridge Isn't that a spacefaring dog with long ears - oh and Max has one too? |
25 Feb 13 - 02:39 PM (#3483613) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Don Firth Re: the "Canadian accent." I live in Seattle and I've been to Vancouver, B. C. about forty-eleven times. And my sister Mary married a Canadian law student who went on to become a Provincial Judge in Ontario. They have visited here in Seattle a number of times and I once spent a couple of weeks with them in Kingston, Ontario. SOME Canadians do the "oot, aboot, and around the hoose" thing, but not ALL. I can't pin it down as a regionalism because I've heard in both in Vancouver and in Kingston. My brother-in-law, the judge, does in on some words, and my sister, who has lived in Canada for a number of decades, has picked it up. On a FEW words. But definitely not every Canadian I've met. No big deal. I've heard even bigger variations in speech between people who live in the west coast of the U. S. and people I met in Kansas when Barbara and I visited her mother there. ======= On the "vocal fry" thing: I think I can speak with a certain authority on this issue. I've taken singing lessons from three different voice teachers over a period of several years, and they, of course, covered matters of tone production and speech. Plus, before I went into radio, I took a course in broadcasting, which included a section called "Broadcast English." In Broadcast English, the idea was to eliminate regionalisms and odd-ball mannerisms in vocalization and pronunciation and teach the students to use "Standard American Speech." Something like "vocal fry" would have been thoroughly jumped on as a very bad speech habit in the Broadcast English course. And all three of my singing teachers would have been horrified to find one of their vocal students falling into a speech habit like that, because that little "rasp" at the end of a word and/or sentence is quite hard on the vocal folds. If done over a period of time, it will eventually lead to chronic laryngitis—and much worse. In the young, it's an attempt to sound "cool," and in others, it's an attempt at pseudo-sophistication. That's why some elderly dowager ladies have baritone speaking voices. BAD!! Don Firth |
25 Feb 13 - 07:13 PM (#3483688) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Alice I agree with Don. Habits like vocal fry can damage your voice over time. I think people are, in general, unaware of many things that can damage your voice. Alice |
25 Feb 13 - 08:09 PM (#3483703) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Lighter I associate "vocal fry" especially with the word "rilly." The controversy is whether it's a real affectation or just some unconscious sound that's always been around but is only being noticed today by carping old people who don't know how to rock. When I first noticed it some years ago ('90s?), before I even knew it had a name, it was coming almost exclusively from "Valley Girl" types: stereotypically shallow, materialistic, derisive females under 25. My perception hasn't changed much since then. Maybe it's been around long enough now to have become unconscious for people born after, say, 1995. But it always seemed like an affectation to me. Like I mean, rilly. Have you ever thought about "is-is"? As in, "The question is is whether 'vocal fry' is something new or what." Listen to almost anybody on TV news nowadays - reporters and interviewees - and I think you'll find in sentences like that it's the rule rather than the exception. |
25 Feb 13 - 08:40 PM (#3483715) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu "The controversy is whether it's a real affectation or just some unconscious sound that's always been around but is only being noticed today by carping old people who don't know how to rock." No controversy... I abhor it. And I know how to rock... far more than any brain dead little valley girl (your words re "valley girl"). Some "sounds are cool" but an entire change of speech pattern and inflection that simply detracts from human communication is, well, unacceptable to me. |
26 Feb 13 - 01:34 AM (#3483772) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Gibb Sahib I'd find it hard to believe that creaky voice (/ vocal fry) is mainly an affectation *nowadays*. Being a transplant to California from New England to Southern California, it's something I notice constantly. I spend a considerable amount of time in places like coffeeshops, overhearing conversations of people below age 25. The thing I hear most is the glide up at the end of phrases -- which I find irritating, I suppose, because it is just not "music to my ears" in the way that tones from my region and generation would sound like. That is, I feel surrounded by these "strange Southern California people"! In the end though, it's just regional speech. Closely following the up-glide is the creaky voice. It is so common and seemingly unconscious that I don't see it as an affectation. And it no longer has anything to do with "valley girls." I don't even think it has much to do with sounding cool or what have you -- though certainly it indicates one's age pretty well. I think it's pervasive enough to be considered, again, mainly a regional and generational thing now. I have supposed that women do it more because they want to talk in a lower register, and their voices "bottom out." *** For Canadians who think that Canadians don't generally say out/about differently than Americans... sorry, but they most certainly do. I'd say it's the number 1 speech clue, from the American perspective, that someone is from Canada. It has become a bit of a custom to signify that difference with the orthography "oot." No, it does not rhyme with "boot." That's just the way the spelling has evolved. Regardless, there is a *very* consistent difference between how Americans and Canadians tend to say "out." Not all Canadians say "out" the same! BUT a really large number say it in a way that most Americans do not, and for that reason the difference serves as a good accent "border" between the two countries' speech. Other aspects of Canadian accents are fairly clear, but these turn up in some American accents, too, such that they don't create such a perception of difference as does "out." |
26 Feb 13 - 10:36 AM (#3483905) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,Stim Good and thoughtful comments, Gibb Sahib. The rest of you, not so much. |
26 Feb 13 - 10:10 PM (#3484103) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: McGrath of Harlow "I think it's pervasive enough to be considered, again, mainly a regional and generational thing now" That would imply it is characteristic of young men as well as young women in the relevant demographic? Is it? The rising intonation would be I imagine - in England as well. The general assumption is that a major reason for that has been the popularity of the soap Neighbours a few years back. |
26 Feb 13 - 10:22 PM (#3484106) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Donuel I find Alex Wagner is one of Earth's great beauties. She has the best of several racial perfections of beauty in one. I found that group chanting sometimes reaches a resonance that causes the air to pop with an overtone of static white noise CRACKLING that can even be picked up on microphones. It is a very unusual phenomenon. Hey Gibb that glide up you speak of is primarily Irish and is heard in even the most distinguished circles in Boston's high society. |
27 Feb 13 - 08:43 AM (#3484255) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 The real meaning of vocal fry. |
27 Feb 13 - 05:50 PM (#3484473) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu Good points recently but I still want to smack someone who wants who sings when they talk. No rocket science. No anthropologic analyses. No linguistic analyses. I just wanna smack em because I am that annoyed. |
27 Feb 13 - 05:59 PM (#3484477) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 Like, duh, let's not go there. |
27 Feb 13 - 06:28 PM (#3484487) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Bill D "I find Alex Wagner is one of Earth's great beauties." She's lovely, and evidently a nice, intelligent lady... but she talks funny. ;>) |
27 Feb 13 - 08:09 PM (#3484521) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Gibb Sahib McGrath-- "I think it's pervasive enough to be considered, again, mainly a regional and generational thing now" That would imply it is characteristic of young men as well as young women in the relevant demographic? Is it? The rising intonation would be I imagine - in England as well. [Disclaimer: I am speaking only from my casual observations (though those observation are reasonably extensive).] I didn't mean to imply that it was characteristic of young men as well, sorry. It's mostly "girls". Here, "girls" is meant as a nebulous category.... not any well-defined age range, rather a social category. Put in a crude way, it's a category of girls and women (say, up to 40 yrs old!) largely defined by cultural ideas of desirability and "youthfulness." (I am not trying to be rude here, just making an observation of how I understand the use of "girls" in at least an American context.) In fact, my "theory" is that (at least for some people), this vocal effect is an (unconscious) indicator of one being or seeing oneself as a "girl." I'll spare you hearing it for now, but I have a musical track I made that includes a woman (California native) who was 37-ish at the time. In it, she speaks a line in a "fry" voice that I think my audience (when I auditioned the track live) widely heard as "sexy"--judging from the audience's audible reaction when they heard it. (This, by the way, was the woman's natural, unconscious voice.) One might normally think a "breathy" voice (customary in the past) would be "sexy," however, my interpretation is that this creaky voice indicates the woman belongs to the category of a youngish, probably "available" group...possibly even that she is "Californian," etc. -- all categories that potentially suggest sexiness. More likely, the voice only sounds "sexy" for certain people conditioned to it; it only functions in those cultural conditioned contexts. I think I have been acculturated to hear it as a potentially sexy voice, i.e. indicating a "girl." At the same time, in more "professional" contexts, I find it personally irritating and indicative of things like "lack of confidence" and "lack of qualification" -- i.e. equally prejudiced yet different perceptions. I know that may sound like a lot of over-interpretation, but it really rings true, to me, at least! The rising intonation, BTW, is something widely associated -- in America -- with Southern California ("Los Angeles"). However, it has spread with young people all over the US and Canada, presumably through media. Here (Los Angeles County) it is maybe just as common with men as with women. |
27 Feb 13 - 08:34 PM (#3484527) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: gnu Another informative post, Gibb. Thanks. |
27 Feb 13 - 09:00 PM (#3484535) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Lighter > The rising intonation, BTW, is something widely associated -- in America -- with Southern California It was long associated with the South. Now it's all over. In fact, any particular connection with SoCal is new to me. |
27 Feb 13 - 09:35 PM (#3484542) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: GUEST,999 San Fernando Valley is what you be looking for. |
28 Feb 13 - 12:28 AM (#3484566) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Gibb Sahib Hmm, probably several different things that could be described as "rising intonation," Lighter. When I visited Liverpool, England, the speech feature that jumped out at me was what I would also call a rising intonation at end of statements. But that was a different one than the WestCoast/Cali one! We may be thinking of different things, since I don't associate what I'm hearing the majority of high school kids in my town (in the San Gabriel Valley) do with the US South...and time and again when people deliberately imitate a "Los Angeles" accent, they do it. Or maybe these are all a similar thing, but I (and some others) don't "hear" them the same when it is combined with other Southern US, Australian, Irish, etc accent features! Let's take a poll! :-) |
28 Feb 13 - 06:19 PM (#3484849) Subject: RE: BS: 'vocal fry'- my suspicions confirmed From: Stringsinger My theory is that some women want to sound authoritative so they imitate the masculine sounds of a bass voice or radio announcer and try to drop their voices beyond their actual range. If you notice what they are talking about, it usually is some declarative statement and they feel that when they induce vocal fry, they are going to be taken more seriously. Big mistake! |