To Turn Singing on Its Ear: The Singer's Voice and the Tomatis Listening Curve, Part 1 Author: Pauley, John-Bede Article from: Journal of Singing 63, no. 4 [March/April 2007]: 405-413 Article date: March 1, 2008 Copyright National Association of Teachers of Singing Mar/Apr 2008 Reproduced by kind permission of Richard Dale Sjoerdsma, PhD, Editor in Chief, Journal of Singing, 7206 - 5th Avenue, Kenosha, WI 53143 Figures have been omitted in this reprint About the author: Br. John-Bede Pauley, OSB, is a Benedictine monk of St. John's Abbey. He is currently studying for a PhD in Musicology at Durham University, U.K. His areas of research interest are twentieth century British music; the relation of music to theology, spirituality, and liturgy; and the role of acoustics in performing and listening. INTRODUCTION IN TRAINING THE VOICE, should teachers and students be concerned with training the ear--not in the sense musicians usually understand "ear training" (identifying intervals, chord progressions, and so on), but training the ear to a stronger acuity to high partials? It could be argued that the role of the ear is given relatively short shrift in contemporary Western culture. Many observe that ours tends to be a society preponderantly oriented towards the visual. This is not to deny that the aural also is important in contemporary culture; but is it an exaggeration to say that the general populace is more finely attuned to the visual than to the aural? Electronic amplification of sound, in spite of the benefits it brings, has rendered a finely tuned perception of overtones more a matter of personal preference than a necessity. In the arts, the aural seems, at first glance, to be as vibrant as the visual. Here too, however, a closer look leads one to ask whether this, unlike earlier periods in history, is not the era of the eye. Is it a coincidence that oration was a highly regarded art form in ancient Greece and Rome; that the general populace in Elizabethan England loved the very sound not only of Shakespeare's and Marlowe's prose, but also of the oratory in courts of law; or that the latest symphony in nineteenth century Vienna was a "media event"? Today, on the other hand, the art form that excites the greatest interest on all levels of society, in the largest cities as well as the smallest towns, is film. Articles and dissertations are written on cinematography and the visual sophistication of this or that camera angle; but how many film scores stand up as works in their own right? The better film scores are considered to be those that do not detract from the visual. If one concedes this shift from an emphasis on the aural to the visual, how has it happened? A full consideration of that question is beyond the scope of this article. But