Thursday 12 April 2012

Standard of singing teaching in professional colleges

Is the standard of singing teaching in our professional drama and dance colleges where it should be?

I have no doubt that there is a lot of good teaching going on, and witnessed this first hand during the time I spent teaching at GSA a few years ago. 

However, I have reason to doubt the teaching in 2 top London colleges, if personal reports are to be believed.

I shall not name the students or the colleges in question, but these are true case studies reported to me in the last month.

Student 1 has been a student of mine on and off for about 5 years.  She also had access to excellent West End standard training at Thomas Telford School.   She obtained a place on a dance oriented West End training course and is now completing her 2nd year.   One of her audition pieces for the college was Mr Snow (Carousel), and the student is a natural soprano.

When I saw her a month ago her confidence was completely shot to pieces, and she had lost all the natural spark and bright quality she always had in her voice.   It transpires that in the 2 years she has been there she has not been encouraged to sing any repertoire in her natural range.   The college does group singing lessons, and this student's teacher seems to have a very rigid idea about technique.  If you do not do things their way you are not singing correctly, apparently.  Also the repertoire has been almost exclusively ultra contemporary.  The upshot has been that the student has been asked to sing entirely repertoire she is unfamiliar with, often in a voice range she feels does not suit her voice best, and has never been able to demonstrate her natural ability.   She is very happy to learn new and modern rep, but wants to be able to balance that with traditional styles and techniques.

We had an hour and a half together a month ago, and got the vocal folds reconnecting, got the focus back onto the physical support networks, and got her smiling again and enjoying singing - that simple prerequisite for good singing - enjoyment.


Student 2 is a new student I met for the first time this week.  She has just returned from her first major contract on a big show in Germany and is looking to push herself forward into more singing roles over here.   In warm up she easily reached a high A, which really surprised her.  It transpires that in her training, again at a top London college, she was quickly labelled as a dancer who could sing and lumped into the chorus / dancers and never given the opportunity to push herself vocals.

Consequently a voice that has a very natural top range has gone completely unnoticed.  It is an excellent voice up to D/E, with a great natural and very safe belt.  But there is a whole register of very natural notes that previous teachers have never uncovered / developed.

Surely these circumstances should not be allowed to go unchallenged.   I advised student 1 to speak to her director of study and request a change of tutor.  This should be her prerogative.  In my time at GSA I had one student request to leave me as he didn't feel he was benefiting from my teaching; at the same time I was given another 3rd year student who had an exceptional technique and wanted more rep coaching that her current teacher, a non-pianist, could not offer.

But it does worry me that students are paying huge fees to attend these prestigious colleges, and then they discover the teaching is not what they expected.

What can be done?  Please feel free to leave any thoughts.

2 comments:

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