Arthur D Hewlett, MA, BLitt, LRAM.
The following extract is taken from Arthur Hewlett's book Think Afresh About The Voice, London:
Thames Publishing, 1987
Foreword
The
human voice is a very strange instrument. We use it very early
in life and continue to make use of it until the end. Yet each
voice is unique and often widely different from the next, and
we are not sure how it works. It is only slowly that a sure knowledge
of the mechanics of the voice is being compounded. And in different
'schools' a different emphasis is put on a certain sound, or
a certain part of the vocal machine.
When I was young the emphasis seemed to be almost exclusively
on the raising of the soft palate and the lowering of the larynx.
Indeed, at my very first lesson I was encouraged to press the
Adam's Apple down with my finger.
I had heard of Ernest White's books but was told not to bother
about them. That, unhappily, was the attitude towards White's
pioneer work in those days. Since then, quite recently, I have
read them, and found them most interesting and helpful. The sinuses
can be seen in their true perspective, more particularly since
the revision of White's books and Mr. Hewlett's own contributions.
- Sir Peter Pears, C.B.E.
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