- Extended technique
Extended techniques are performance techniques used in
music to describe unconventional, unorthodox or "improper" s ofsinging , or of playingmusical instrument s.Although the use of extended technique was uncommon in the
common practice period (c. 1600 - 1900), extended techniques are more common inmodern classical music since about 1900. Extended techniques have also flourished inpopular music s, which are typically less constrained by notions of "proper" technique than are traditional orchestral music. It should be noted that nearly alljazz performers make significant use of extended techniques of one sort or another, particularly in more recent styles likefree jazz oravant-garde jazz . Musicians infree improvisation have also made heavy use of extended techniques.Most contemporary composers strive to explore the possibility of different instruments, cooperating with musicians in order to expand the "vocabulary" of given instruments. This undoubtedly increases the diversity of instrumental colors for contemporary pieces. However, some extended techniques are exceedingly difficult to master, or require instruments in uncommonly good condition; instruments are sometimes custom made to explore extended techniques.
Examples
Vocal
*
Sprechstimme (speech-singing)
*overtone singing (harmonic singing, or vocal multiphonics)
*ululation
*beatboxing (vocal percussionists)
* Growling
* Screaming and ShoutingString instruments
* unusual bowing technique:
double stop s andmultiple stop s,sul ponticello ,sul tasto ,col legno
*prepared guitar
* stringmicrotone s (vertical and linear)
* exaggeratedtremolo
*tapping or rubbing the soundboard of stringed instruments
* alternate fingerings
* altered tunings (scordatura )
*tapping Piano
*
prepared piano
*string piano Woodwind or brass instruments
* overblowing
* exaggerated brass head-shakes
* activating keys orvalve s without blowing
* combination of amouthpiece of one instrument with the main body of another, for example, using an altosaxophone mouthpiece on a standardtrombone .
* turning the mouthpiece of awoodwind instrument upside-down and playing as normal.
*breath technique orarticulation :multiphonic s,tonguing orflutter tonguing ,continuous breathing orcircular breathing , trumpet half-valve playing, humming while blowing,double buzz , blowing a disengaged mouthpiece or reed, unusual mutesElectronic
* added
electronics orMIDI control
*Turntablism
*Circuit bending Other instruments
* keyboard technique involving the fist, flat of hand, arm, or external device to create
tone clusters
* unusualharmonic s, includingmultiphonics
*glissandi , tuner glissando
* rudimental or "dynamic" double bass on the drum set, using hand rudiments such as double stroke rolls and flam taps and playing them with the feet
* Stacking 2 or more [cymbals] one on top of the other to change the sound properties of the instrument and add possibilities.
* custom-builtpercussion mallets , occasionally made forVibraphone or Tubular Bells (and other pitched-percussion in increasingly rare circumstances) which feature more than one mallet-head, and so are capable of producing multiple pitches and difficult chords (though usually only the chords they were designed to play). These mallets are seldom used, and percussionists sometimes make them themselves when they are needed. When implemented, they are usually only used once or twice in an entire work, and are alternated with conventional mallets; usually they are used only when playing a different instrument in each hand.Notable composers
*
Bruno Bartolozzi
*Glenn Branca
*John Cage
*Joseph Celli
*Rhys Chatham
*Henry Cowell
*George Crumb
*Robert Erickson
*Brian Ferneyhough
*Sofia Gubaidulina
*Helmut Lachenmann
*Krzysztof Penderecki
*Steve Reich
*Giacinto Scelsi
*Salvatore Sciarrino
*Stephen Scott
*David Tudor Notable performers
Guitar
*
Syd Barrett
*Keith Rowe
*Buckethead
*Steve Vai
*Evan Hirschelman
*Preston Reed
*Roland Dyens
*Michael Hedges
*Derek Bailey
*Fred Frith
*Štěpán Rak
*Arto Lindsay
*Enver İzmaylov
*Kaki King
*Ichirou Agata
*Aaron Colbourne
*Tom Morello
*Thurston Moore Voice
*
Joan La Barbara
*Blixa Bargeld
*Shelley Hirsch
*Diamanda Galás
*Sainkho Namtchylak
*Demetrio Stratos
* George Fisher
*Mike Patton
*Aengus Ó Maoláin
*Meredith Monk
*Maja Ratkje
*Brian Chippendale
*Tanya Tagaq Gillis Saxophone
*
Ned Rothenberg
*Rahsaan Roland Kirk
*Peter Brötzmann
*Mats Gustafsson Trombone
*
John Kenny
*Stuart Dempster
* George Lewis
*Paul Zukofsky Cello
*
Frances-Marie Uitti
*Rohan de Saram
*Helen Liebmann Violin
*
Ernesto Rodrigues
*Alexander Balanescu
*Graeme Jennings Flute
*
Maggi Payne
* Robert DickBass
*
Bertram Turetzky
*Michael Manring Drums and percussion
*
Steven Schick
*Burkhard Beins See also
*
List of notable pieces which use extended techniques
*String instrument extended technique Further reading
*
Stuart Dempster 's "The ModernTrombone : A Definition of Its Idioms", ISBN 0-520-03252-7.
* Patricia and Allen Strange's "The ContemporaryViolin ," ISBN 0-520-22409-4, and other books in "The New Instrumentation" series.
*Bertram Turetzky 's "The ContemporaryContrabass " ISBN 0-520-06381-3.
* Michael Edward Edgerton's "The 21st Century Voice," ISBN 0-8108-5354-X, and other books in "The New Instrumentation" series. Scarecrow Press, 2005.External links
* [http://www.wfg.woodwind.org/fing.html Woodwind Fingering charts]
* [http://www.sforzando.se/flutetech/index.htm New Sounds for Flute] by Mats Möller
* [http://www.mti.dmu.ac.uk/~ahugill/manual/ The Orchestra: A User's Manual] by Andrew Hugill with The Philharmonia Orchestra. Includes definitions, descriptions and video interviews of extended techniques for most all common orchestral instruments.
* [http://www.oddmusic.com/ oddmusic] A website dedicated to unique, odd, ethnic, experimental and unusual musical instruments and resources.
* [http://www.radiopapesse.org/w2d3/v3/view/radiopapesse/notizie--1372/index.html?area=5 Audio Interview to Margaret Leng Tan] : Through the silence. John Cage in Memoriam 1912-1992, La Biennale, Venice, 2007. Toy and Prepared Piano
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