- The main reason
people have always sung is to praise god, says
Jill Purce. (Her conversation is littered with
fascinating bits of evidence: a recent analysis
of the number of times praying, meditating and
praising through song were mentioned in the Bible
had praising coming out at something like 83%,
she says). With the rise of humanism and the
scientific establishment, praising god became
increasingly sidelined.
-
- Then there were
people singing together as they did physical work
- in some cultures they believed it was actually
the voice that did the work. Then as people
became musically literate, singing became
increasingly something that the majority of
people would listen to rather than do. Finally
there was TV, which Jill Purce says has made us
passive as a society. 'We don't create any more.
It's fed to us.'
- All of which has
led to situation where we have virtually gone
silent as a society. 'That has happened at a time
when every scientific discipline, whether it's
maths, zoology,physics, chemistry, biology, is
describing its particular parcel of the physical
universe in terms of resonance. And as human
beings the only way we can resonate consciously
is through the voice. So just as we're being told
everywhere we look that the universe is a
resonant one, we do not participate in it.'
-
- One of the things
Jill Purce has discovered through her work is
that people are longing to sing. 'That is
demonstrated most by the meteoric rise of karaoke
in our society, she says. 'Given the opportunity,
everyone is up there doing it and loving it. But
karaoke is not the answer. Karaoke means
"empty orchestra". It's a blind alley,
because with state-of-the-art machines, if you
are singing an Elvis number, your voice is taken
away and transmogrified into Elvis's voice. That
is the ultimate insult - your voice is not
acceptable. Karaoke is great fun and people
really love it but I do feel that's not the
answer.'
- People come to Jill
Purce for a variety of reasons - they want to
find out more about the voice on a deeper level,
they have specific vocal problems, or they just
want to sing. Many of the would-be singers are
people who as children were told by music
teachers to stand at the back and mouth it. Later
in life they decide to throw off this early
conditioning and rediscover their voices.
-
- But the techniques
go much deeper than simply drumming up the
courage to sing a song. 'The healing properties
of the voice are extremely profound,' she says.
'The only way we can get access to the inside of
cells and molecules and organs and limbs without
being cut open is by making sound. Making a
humming sound, you vibrate the body in a very
extreme way. When you vibrate the body you affect
everything inside it, you can give yourself a
positive massage or you can mess things up. If
you don't use your voice, it's like an instrument
lying on a shelf going more and more out of tune.
Singing is not only one of the most powerful
forms of meditation - working with the emotions
and with the psyche and psychology - it is also a
profound means for healing and one which everyone
has access to, but in general doesn't understand
or use.'
-
- But for most of the
professional singers who turn up at Jill Purce's
door, it is a specific vocal complaint that needs
sorting out - often something that conventional
singing teaching has not been able to deal with.
'Singing is as much a psychological thing as a
real thing,' she says. She remembers a tenor with
a problem at the top of his range who felt that
it was because of an emotional block. The problem
was solved by getting him to act out something
that had happened when he was a child, which he
thought was the cause of the problems. 'The voice
is like the psyche, and if the psyche is in any
way damaged, the voice is damaged. But you can
mend the psyche by mending the voice - and it's a
lot easier to do it that way!'
-
- Talk of the inner
life can seem rather threatening for some people,
but Jill Purce has had very little adverse
reaction from conventional voice teachers who
know her reputation and often send people to her
for help. 'What I do is extremely good for the
classical singing voice. The work is mainly based
on chant. We do basic breathing, mainly chant,
and also simple songs.'
-
- Central to the work
is Mongolian
overtone
chanting, which is especially
useful for people who are inhibited about
singing, since it is based on one note. 'Even the
most extreme ones loosen up after a bit and feel
they can make a note - if it's a growl it doesn't
matter.
-
- 'It is based on a
very extreme form of resonance. You take a single
note and sequentially amplify the component parts
of that note. All notes contain a series of other
notes, unless they come from sine wave generators
or tuning forks. You hear the note, but the
information that enables you to identify the
source of the sound, which enables you to say
it's your mother or your sister or your fridge or
your car, or flute or violin, is the harmonics.
They give the note its quality. We use harmonics
to identify speech and the source of sound. That
is usually as far as we take it. What I'm doing
is showing people how those notes are contained
in the voice and then show how to work with the
cavities of the mouth, pharynx, larynx and so
forth in such a way that you can selectively
amplify the harmonics and make them louder than
the fundamental note itself, so that what you
hear is the lower, slightly drone-like
fundamental and above it the flute-like sounds,
which sound very magical because they are
absolutely pure, because they themselves have no
harmonics.
-
- 'It is a
fascinating sound, and also non-localised.
Because the overtones are the result of resonance
they float off into space and spiral around in
the middle of the room and it's rather hard to
identify the source. People often describe it as
the music of the spheres, or angelic choirs. It's
a bit like taking white light and putting it
through a prism so that you see the colours of
the rainbow. We are working with resonance in a
way you never would with ordinary singing.
-
- Resonance is one of
the hardest things for singing teachers to
communicate, really. Singing teachers have all
these very vague expressions which they have
usually learnt from their teachers, who learnt it
from theirs. They have a lot of weird metaphors,
often very mechanical ones in terms of resonance:
put it in your right temple or left knee! They
struggle with the process of resonance, whereas
with overtone chanting you are working with
resonance absolutely precisely, so you can say,
"Enhance the sixth harmonic" and you do
it, because it's a real science. It's an enormous
adjunct for singers to be able to do that.'
-
- A catalyst for her
work with resonance was a relationship - personal
and professional - with Karlheinz Stockhausen. In
the early seventies they travelled all round
north America with his Stimmung, which makes
extensive use of overtones. 'He had an
understanding of sound that I'd never met in
anyone,' she says.
-
- Her work won the
approval of the operatic establishment in 1993
when English National Opera rang to ask if she
would run a seminar called 'The Healing Power of
Opera.' 'I said, "Are you sure you've got
the right person? I think I'm running a recovery
programme from opera"!'
- Linked to Jonathan
Harvey's Inquest of Love, the seminar ended with
Jill Purce leading the audience in a meditation
before curtain-up on the first night. A technical
problem meant the event had to be switched from
the Coliseum's vast auditorium, but Jill Purce
says her ultimate aim is to have the audience,
orchestra and cast all chanting together.
-
- For her, there is a
very real need to put the magic back into
performance. 'When you listen to old recordings,
the technique is not necessarily there but the
magic, the power is there. Now, the technique is
immaculate, but the magic has gone. This goes
right through every aspect of music, and
particularly vocal music, even in the classical
operatic tradition. I think the new team at ENO
are aware of this.
- 'One of the things
that has happened through recording is a kind of
ossification. You get people trying to sing like
Maria Callas rather than finding their own voice
and their own magic. It means it isn't really
growing, there is no creativity, no power and
magic coming through it. In the highest echelons
of the music world, people are aware of this.
They come to me because they are disenchanted, so
to speak, with the music world. It seems to be a
dead end, not going anywhere, no real magic.
-
- The chanting and
search for the inner self can give an impression
of tremendously earnest endeavour, but as anyone
who has worked with Jill Purce knows, she has a
very well developed sense of fun. And despite her
thoughts on the state of music ('Professional
musicians tend not to like music very much,' she
says provocatively) it plays an important part in
her own life, as you would expect with someone of
her background. 'I lived in a house with three
concert grands, and the house was always full of
musicians. My mother studied with Cortot and was
a very good teacher. She was worshipped by many
of her students. She started the music department
at Keele University.'
-
- The classical
upbringing still sometimes asserts itself in Jill
Purce's choice of music for her personal singing
pleasure (currently it is Schumann's Frauenliebe
und -leben) but it is the wider manifestations of
singing that preoccupy her. 'One of the things
that happens when we sing is that we release our
emotion in a healthy way. If we don't sing, we do
it in antisocial and unhealthy ways. One of the
societal pathologies that has come as a result of
this non-singing is unhealthy ways of expressing
emotions, like beating people up.
-
- Which leads to a
fascinating discussion of football chanting as a
surviving war cry, negative uses of the voice,
and the loss of community singing in coaches now
that people sit in their cars and listen to
tapes. But it is back to the tenth century for a
real glimpse of the value once put on singing.
'Hildegard of Bingen had to be punished on one
occasion. It was decreed that she could say the
offices but not sing them - that was the highest
punishment that could be given.'
-
- Copyright Jill
Purce
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