Instruments
Singers
In vocal musical situations there are definitely observations to be made about gender. In local productions in this city, there are far more women than men, and the men that are there are not generally very young. I have observed this in choral situations and in areas of musicals and productions. I was going to be in the musical Fiddler on the Roof several years ago, but it was canceled becuase they could not get enough men. This summer I was in an opera with the same group of people, and we pulled it off with only four men as part of the cast!
Since Converse is a women’s college, there is Converse Chorale which is for just women, but Spartanburg Festival Chorus (Converse’s other choir) has men and women from the community as well. I have sung in both and enjoyed singing in both, but I do have to say that I prefer singing in choral situations with both genders. Having men’s voices just adds a rich, deep fullness and a tone quality that solely female choirs quite cannot capture.
Historically speaking, women were not always allowed to be part of the same musical activities as men. It was not until the 20th century that women were allowed to play in orchestras. Women were not allowed to sing with men for a while. Choirs consisted of adult men, young boys, and men and boys that had been castrated to keep their voices high.
Being musical was a sign of being cultured, but many people believed that a woman’s music was inferior and belonged in the home. Dabbling around with it and playing it for salon gatherings were perfectly proper, but the idea of a woman having a career as a musician was scandalous.





I cannot believe that they would castrate people to keep the high notes for singing instead of just letting women sing. I also never knew that the statistics of gender roles in music were so extreme to be in the 90 percentage.
ReplyDeleteI read somewhere that when orchestras began holding blind auditions, the jobs won by women increased dramatically. When a carpet was put down so that the judges couldn't hear the sound of womens' heels, even more won jobs. Isn't that crazy? Women are just as accomplished on their instruments as men, but are often held back by these underlying biases.
ReplyDeleteYou share some thoughtful comments here, Adriana. And I'm very glad to know about the novel--I've added it to my list "Books I Should Read When I Can." :-)
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