Friday, 16 November 2012

The timbre of Roy Orbison

*

Roy Orbison was a very interesting pop music phenomenon, because (I think) people liked him almost wholly due to his vocal timbre - the recognizable quality of his voice - especially on long high notes.

*

When listening to an Orbison song, I find that everything else is subordinated to the expectation and enjoyment of the sound of his voice on certain notes.

The rest of the song is merely a frame to enhance these notes .

*

I think this is close to unique among popular singers - most of whom are known not least for their looks or style; but if for singing more for their ability to put a song across, power, phrasing, pleasantness of production, extreme range, maybe pyrotechnical agility - but hardly ever for just the simple sound of the voice as revealed in long notes.

*

Timbre is not possible to describe with precision - Orbison had a tenor voice in which falsetto was mixed, and which has a rapid tremolo - mostly not vibrato, which is a variation in pitch; but instead a variation in volume.

The combination was thrilling, and also somehow tragic - perhaps due to the falsetto elements which implied a boyish vulnerability.

*

2 comments:

  1. One of the attractive features of Louis Armstrong's singing is his control of volume, in contrast to many pop singers who just belt it out. As far as I know this is my only original critical comment about Satchmo, popcrap, and all that.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a faux pas! I mentioned Armstrong without linking to this wee delicacy.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49TSh8KrHQI

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated. "Anonymous" comments are deleted without being read.