A lot of my writings (and yes, I write because I have a hard time working these days :) have been about music. I blame
Hive account@slobberchops, who besides writing very funny about his years in the the now defunct discount supermarket, Kwiksave, also is a music aficionado who nominated me for one of these internet challenges! I also blame
Hive account@roused who is the Bavarian "good ole boy" who keep coming up with musical ideas that gets my head spinning with thoughts. I also owe this post to
Hive account@shortcut who yesterday wrote about the German eighties band BAP
The newest thought I got is this: we treat instrumental music and the music of the human voice very differently. Instruments takes practice, but we all have a voice, and that voice is used for so much else than music. So it seems to me that regional differences are much more apparent in the way we construe singing than playing.
I will just come with a lot of examples as my brain already is boiling from the hot weather....

The German ballad tradition with its sudden reciting parts in the middle of the song. Something daringly ugly about it (shortcut's post was what started me :)

Scandinavians are very fond of the youthful and almost bell like female voice preferably a capella or with a single simple instrument as harp or fiddle. The Norwegian singer Sissel Kirkebye is a good example. We share this with the Irish I think. I have often heard it described as cold by people from other countries, others worship it out of proportions :)

The incredibly soft male voice in South American music. I had to get used to it :) Think about how João Gilberto was not the one who went on tour with US musicians. Instead they took his wife Astrud Gilberto who was not a great singer at all. She just had a charming voice that fitted the North Americans better.

Batourouba Diabaté from Guinea (as far as I have been able to gather) I first heard her when buying this album on bandcamp. West African singing seems to tire many Westerners with its repetitive patterns and different scales. I love it.

Shakira is interesting as she both sings in English as an international star and in Spanish as the greatest star in the Spanish speaking world. Often she makes both a Spanish and an English version so you can compare directly. The Spanish versions are deeper in timbre. More beautiful.

The French have this enormous contrasts between laid back phrasings and then suddenly going into very forced phrasings that sounds like they suddenly have to tell you something important. I have heard people call it affected.

I am not really suited to say much about Persian singing. I have been listening a lot to the maybe most beautiful flute in the world, the ney, as I am playing my PVC shakuhachi myself, but these guys! Anyway middle eastern singing is the one I have heard most negative remarks about. People hear cats and terrorists. Never understood why.

This is more of a cultural than a regional divide, but still same principle. Most people are able to take in classical music, relax at least when hearing it - harder is it when the singers start. Not the easiest piece admittedly.
My friend
Hive account@shortcut has started to write some posts every morning - #morgenseiten he calls it - morning-pages. Here is his explanation of the project:
It goes like this: you shall each morning write from the soul, anything going through your head.
He writes a lot more, but this is the essence :) (Read his first morgenseiten post here)
I have decided to try the same. I write from the top of my head every morning or late morning if I have been sleeping late. I only correct typos and make a headline afterwards. Else everything is left as written. Expect some of it to sound like stage directions.
