William Vennard (January 31, 1909 Normal, Illinois – January 10, 1971, Los Angeles, California) was a famous American vocal pedagogist who devoted his life to researching the human voice and its use in singing. He was one of the driving forces behind a major shift within the field of vocal pedagogy during the middle of the 20th century.[1]
Vennard studied English at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1930. He became interested in music and decided to pursue a career as an opera singer. He studied at Northwestern University earning a Bachelor of Music in Vocal Performance in 1941, followed by graduate studies at the American Conservatory of Music[4] in Chicago, where he earned a master's degree in Vocal Performance in 1943. Vennard spent the next several years teaching part-time simultaneously at the Chicago Evangelistic Institute, DePaul University and the American Conservatory.
In 1946 he became a member of the faculty of music at the University of Southern California, chairing its voice department from 1950 – 1971.
Among the associations to which he belonged are the National Association of Teachers of Singing, which he served in several capacities, including national president. In 1970 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from Pepperdine University in recognition of his outstanding contributions to singing and the science of singing.[3]
As a singer, Vennard was active in opera, oratorio and solo song; as a teacher of singing, many of his students achieved worldwide success. His renowned text, Singing, the Mechanism and the Technique, was one of the first complete texts regarding the singing voice[5] and a constant resource for teachers and researchers alike for the following two decades.[6][7] The text provides singers with the fundamental physics of sound,[8] acoustics,[8] correct breathing[9] and posture,[10] and an introduction to common terminology.[5]
Vennard’s collaboration with Janwillem van den Berg resulted in his film Voice Production: the Vibrating Larynx. Winning several awards, including best medical research film from a festival in Prague in 1960, it shows the anatomy and physiology of voice production in the excised larynx. He was a pioneer in the science of singing and in voice pedagogy and was instrumental in fostering collaborative efforts between singers, physicists, psychologists and voice scientists.
^ abDeLeo, Wendy; Daniels Rosenberg, Marci (2019). The Vocal Athlete, Second Edition (2 ed.). Plural Publishing Incorporated. ISBN9781635501650.
^Bybee, Ariel; Ford, James E.; Reid, Cornelius L., eds. (2002). The modern singing master: essays in honor of Cornelius L. Reid (1 ed.). Lanham, Maryland Toronto Oxford: Scarecrow Press. p. 65. ISBN978-0-8108-5173-3.
^ abHoch, Matthew, ed. (2020). So You Want to Sing with Awareness: A Guide for Performers. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN9781538124734.
^ abBickel, Jan E (2016). Vocal Technique: A Physiologic Approach, Second Edition. Plural Publishing Incorporated. ISBN9781944883348.
^Dimon, Jr, Theodore (2022). Your Body, Your Voice: The Key to Natural Singing and Speaking. Illustrated by G. David Brown. North Atlantic Books. ISBN9781623177898.
^Bloechl, Olivia Ashley; Lowe, Melanie; Kallberg, Jeffrey, eds. (2015). Rethinking difference in music scholarship. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-1-107-02667-4.