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1981
Volume 4, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 2057-0341
  • E-ISSN: 2057-035X

Abstract

The Sirens appear in one of the most iconic literary episodes on music-making and music-hearing, in Homer’s twelfth book of The Odyssey (2018: 194), singing an irresistible and lethal song. While the myth of the Sirens’ song has continued to exist for almost three millennia in various formats, this Voicing queries the relevance of the myth as a reference for the practice of singing and examines the experiences of a classical singer who works within contemporary music and has embodied Sirens in performance. Following a short scholarly introduction that questions the role of the singing voice in the Siren song, practitioner-scholar Sophia Edlund interviews Canadian interpreter of contemporary music, soprano/conductor Barbara Hannigan, specifically asking her to consider the meaning of the Sirens and their symbolic value for singing. In this interview, Barbara Hannigan compares her music-making practice with the speculative practice of ‘Siren-ing’, pointing to similarities, such as being in a state of metamorphosis during singing, as well as divergences in terms of how singing is practised and understood.

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/content/journals/10.1386/jivs.4.1.101_1
2019-04-01
2026-04-12

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/content/journals/10.1386/jivs.4.1.101_1
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  • Article Type: Article
Keyword(s): Barbara Hannigan; channelling; music; presence; singing; Sirens
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