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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The alpha and omega in voice, August 14, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
This is everything anybody (actors, speakers and liars) will ever need to know about discovering, developing and using with confidence the voice as a tool to communicate. Westerners especially, I believe, have trained and maimed their voices to suit ideals (The average woman speaks about 6 tones higher than her natural voice prescribes). This book, a trusted training manual in many theatre and opera schools, teaches practically and without pretence, the real abilities of the voice. This is all one needs to acquire/rediscover, with practise, how the voice can be an (extemely flexible) extension of oneself in a physical world. A wholistic adventure which necessarilly encompasses correct breathing and posture, which will eventually be effortless, simply because it is natural. From an acting perspective the Arthur Lessac voice system becomes a perfect partner to the Stanislavskyan system of acting (associated with 'The Method' in USA). The practice of the Lessac system can easily be taught to a child and has proven successful in overcoming a stutter. This probably because the learner is made aware of the manoeuvre-ability of sound and how it is created, and not only on voice as a carrier of language. The book contains many excercises, each making one discover and realise the immense power of (self-generated) sound. Living in Africa one often wonders at the vocal powers of its people. Westerners can also feel at one with their true voices. The Lessac system would be the first (and last) step on the route to rediscovery. This is a popular book (I had two copies stolen from me when it was out of print) amongst performers and all those who believe their bodies are instruments.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Singers, pay attention to this one -, August 12, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
As a voice teacher for many years, I am always being complimented on my speaking voice. Arthur Lessac's book was not my speaking coach, my operatic training was - but the technique is the same. Lessac has done a masterful job explaining the "old" Italian, bel canto/good singing technique that's been around since the 1600's - but he's done it for the speaking voice. Singers need to use the same technique for both speaking and singing, and this is the best book I've found on speaking technique.

Now everyone can understand logically how to improve their speaking and singing voice, and perhaps operatic voices will be better understood as not being something elitist or unnatural. Using the power of your instrument to produce quality sound is amazingly natural - it ain't magic. The "magic" is being given the vocal chords of an angel, inspiration from God, the constitution of a horse, the luck of (all) the Irish, and the intelligence of an Einstein to develop that voice into a Pavarotti, a Sutherland, etc.

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19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Good Voice, Good Man" can be you!, September 16, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
The design is here for a lifetime's care and growth of the human voice. Lessac presents an integrated system of correlating vocal life with all the facets of the actor's instrument (physical, vocal and sensory-imaginative). The techniques teach the concurrent development of the whole through relaxation, breath control and correct posturization, with vocal life itself divided into structural action, tonal action and consonant action. Fun, tongue-twisting exercise poems by Arthur's son Michael. A must for public speakers, politicians, and professional actors alike. --Jack Marston, Anaheim, Californi
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Voice development from the inside out, March 8, 2008
By 
Karen Chung (Taipei, Taiwan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
If you get just one book on voice development, it certainly should be this one. As a phonetics teacher, I don't agree with every single detail in the book. But as someone who has taught English pronunciation and oral skills to ESL learners for decades, and also as a radio broadcaster, I feel a strong resonance with Lessac's approach. Differing in the details doesn't really matter, since the core of Lessac training is heightened sensitivity and slightly understated but focused control rather than specifics.

Lessac uses orchestral instruments as analogies to teach better articulation of each English consonant, e.g. the "N-violin" and the "T-snare drum drumbeat". Though impressionistic in approach, it does helps the student have an optimal quality in mind to aim for, and to pay closer attention to each internal physical event and the effect it produces.

Lessac has a fondness for coining his own jargon, like "NRG" ('energy'), "esthetic" (not "aesthetic"; 'anything that promotes sensitivity and induces awareness of sensation and perception in the body'), "kinesensic" ('intrinsic "self-to-self" sensation'), and of course the famous "Y-Buzz". The new terms are however well justified, since each figures importantly in the framework he teaches. The glossary in the back of the book can help keep everything straight. I also flipped to the index several times when trying to sort out the differences between terms like "tonal NRG" and "structural NRG" in the context of the book.

This is a solid course book, not casual reading, so take the chapters one at a time, mindfully, to reap maximum benefit from the book.

This edition is attractive and carefully edited; I found not a single typo in the whole book. My one criticism is the price. The outstanding content makes it definitely worth the cover price, but I don't see why a paperback needs to be so expensive. Like with Peter Ladefoged's A Course in Phonetics (with CD-ROM), I guess it is because it is a popular university textbook that commands a captive audience. About a third of the cover price would bring it more in line with similar editions. But that's not the author's fault, I assume, and doesn't merit taking off a star. And speaking of Ladefoged's book, it would be helpful to readers if this book included a CD-ROM as well.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must for Musical Theater Performers, August 8, 2007
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
This is probably the best technique out there for freeing and developing a strong vocal instrument for speech and singing. This is the only voice text (and I've read and studied them all: Linklater, Skinner, Berry, Rosenburgh)which gives a spicific structural breakdown for the production of healthy and tonal sound. Most other texts are just exercises, but Lessac's System gives exact physical placement for each vowel, consonant, and dipthong sound as well as extensive tonal work. Especially good for the dancer due to the strong physical emphasis of placement of the tongue, lips, jaw etc. His work on Consonant action is quite inovative, drawing on the actors imagination and assining each consonant sound to an instrument in the orchestra, thereby allowing the actor to more quickly understand the musical quality of speech. Here is a basic overview of what is covered in the text; anatomy of the vocal instrument, the alignment of the body and the economical use of muscular effort to produce sound, the use of optimum pitch to discover and develop the presence of tonality and broaden pitch and range, the use of melody and the onomatopoetic nature of language to communicate ideas, and the application of these skills to a text.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This Approach deserves 10 stars!!, October 18, 2002
By 
Nancy Krebs (Baltimore, Maryland USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
I first became acquainted with Arthur Lessac's work in the 1970's when I was in Graduate School. Since then, his Approach to Voice and Body Training has been the mainstay of my professional and personal life. His new book (the third version) has been written in such a way that complements the older version, yet takes us on a training journey that is wholistically and organically fresh and new. I enjoy teaching from this book, and my students enjoy learning from it!
--Nancy Krebs, Lessac Master Teacher
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Use and Training of the Human Voice, May 24, 2011
This review is from: The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life (Paperback)
This book is pretty amazing. After receiving it as a gift from my father, I read it in small sections because there is so much interesting information. I like how the author treats the topic, with a holistic approach, and a smattering of the metaphysical. It's interesting to experiment with the ideas, and to continue learning. Have a great day! Cosby Gibson, [...]
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The Use and Training of the Human Voice: A Bio-Dynamic Approach to Vocal Life
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