TimAllenMDJD

Friday, December 11, 2015

Melisma

Jingle Hell

The debasement of Christmas songs
Dec 21, 2015 | By ANDREW FERGUSON

"To convey her depth of religious feeling, Christina borrows her mentor's signature vocal trick, using several notes to sing a single syllable. Musicologists call it melisma. It is an old technique, common to Gregorian chants from long ago, but it's more familiar to contemporary audiences through the vein-popping exertions of the late Whitney Houston and countless singers who have kneecapped our national anthem before televised sporting events. As the singer slides around in search of the note to match the syllable, melisma can sound to the amateur ear—mine anyway—like someone handed a pennywhistle to a meth-head."
Timothy Craig Allen, M.D.,J.D. at 7:20 AM
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Timothy Craig Allen, M.D.,J.D.
Jackson, Mississippi, United States
Professor and Chair, Department of Pathology in the University of Mississippi Medical School at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. B.S. Texas A&M University 1980; M.D. Baylor College of Medicine 1984; J.D.with honors University of Chicago 1998. Pulmonary Pathologist. Posts ≠ endorsements. Posts are my own and do not necessarily represent my institution.
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