Return to Westminster Choir of the Arts Homepage Directions | Campus Safety | Calendars | Directory | Libraries | Web Mail
 
Prospective StudentsCurrent StudentsAlumniCommunity PartnersGive to WestminsterFaculty & Staff
About WestminsterSchool of Fine & Performing ArtsAcademicsStudent LifeWestminsters FacultyAdmissionsContinuing EducationWestminster ConservatoryNews & Events
Font Size:
Default  |  Small  |  Medium  |  Large

Voice

Since its founding, Westminster Choir College has made a unique contribution to the world of music because of its emphasis upon vocal training. All undergraduates are required to study voice in order to become well grounded in the fundamentals of singing. Many graduate students also study voice as a major, primary, or elective.

Career Conversation-Advice for Young Singers: Susan Shiplett Ashbaker, former director of artistic and music administration at the Opera Company of Philadelphia, discusses career planning and audition preparation with Kiera Duffy ’01, MM’03 and Dísella Làrusdóttir MM’05, finalists in 2007 Metropolitan Opera Council’s National Auditions, and Laura Brooks Rice, their teacher and a member of Westminster’s voice faculty.

The Voice Department seeks to develop the musician by establishing a sound vocal technique and a thorough understanding of the singing voice, its literature, and pedagogy. These tools are essential for the study and performance of vocal and choral literature and for training students as solo performers, or professional teachers, or choral conductors. Every undergraduate must satisfy departmental requirements for graduation. Juries and other tests are conducted periodically for the purpose of evaluating progress; details may be obtained from the Voice Department.

Degrees Offered

More Information

Graduate Voice primary
Graduate students majoring in Sacred Music or Music Education may study voice as a primary instrument. The program culminates in a graduate recital of 30 to 50 minutes of singing. Weekly studio and performance classes offer frequent performance opportunities.
 

Voice as an Elective
Undergraduate and graduate students may elect to study voice for credit toward their degrees if it is not otherwise a specific requirement. Instruction is in the form of private lessons and an extra tuition fee is assessed. There are no specific entrance or jury requirements.
 

Voice Performance Class
Attendance and participation at weekly studio and performance classes is required for all voice primary students. All Westminster students are invited to attend. The class functions primarily to provide performance opportunities, to acquaint students with a wide variety of vocal literature, and to equip them to teach voice to others.
 

Westminster Voice Laboratory
Westminster has developed a center for the study of the human voice and of voice pedagogy. Designed to enhance the teaching ofthe physiological and acoustic aspects of the voice, the Voice Laboratory offers the latest technology for voice analysis and examination. It also maintains a large collection of books, videos, slides and other teaching aids.

Laboratory equipment includes the Kay Sonograph, the McSpeech Voice Analysis Computer Program, and the Rothenberg Electroglottograph. Using the fiberoptiscope and a stroboscopic light source, singers are able to observe their own vocal folds as they sing and speak.