Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Today's Apocalypse Sign: Vocal Fry

Have you heard of this? Apparently young women across the country are adopting it as a speech style. Unless they all want to be Janis Joplin, I don't get it. Some doctors actually say this could damage their vocal cords in some permanent way. I can see it now...some day women will be getting "larynx jobs" along with other enhancements. That will probably workout as well as the collagen injections for "Jolie lips" look. You've seen how many celebrities that has ruined (Lara Flynn Boyle). She went from hot to hideous.

Anyway, check out the Wiki description of vocal fry and make sure to click the "listen here" link so you know what we're talking about.

A curious vocal pattern has crept into the speech of young adult women who speak American English: low, creaky vibrations, also called vocal fry. Pop singers, such as Britney Spears, slip vocal fry into their music as a way to reach low notes and add style. Now, a new study of young women in New York state shows that the same guttural vibration—once considered a speech disorder—has become a language fad.


Vocal fry, or glottalization, is a low, staccato vibration during speech, produced by a slow fluttering of the vocal chords (listen here). Since the 1960s, vocal fry has been recognized as the lowest of the three vocal registers, which also include falsetto and modal—the usual speaking register. Speakers creak differently according to their gender, although whether it is more common in males or females varies among languages. In American English, anecdotal reports suggest that the behavior is much more common in women. (In British English, the pattern is the opposite.) Historically, continual use of vocal fry was classified as part of a voice disorder that was believed to lead to vocal chord damage. However, in recent years, researchers have noted occasional use of the creak in speakers with normal voice quality.


In the new study, scientists at Long Island University (LIU) in Brookville, New York, investigated the prevalence of vocal fry in college-age women. The team recorded sentences read by 34 female speakers. Two speech-language pathologists trained to identify voice disorders evaluated the speech samples. They marked the presence or absence of vocal fry by listening to each speaker’s pitch and two qualities called jitter and shimmer—variation in pitch and volume, respectively. (courtesy of Wikipedia)

I told you at the beginning of this Challenge that I would be kind of all over the place with my posts. When I heard about this on the news I felt obligated to pass on my education. You're welcome.

Have you heard about this? Do you know anyone who pratices speaking this way? Feel free to share.

Whisk off to W.....

13 comments:

Nick Wilford said...

I don't know what a full sentence would sound like spoken like this, but the noise at the end of that clip sounds like a lower register Chewbacca.

SueH said...

I've never heard of this - but I can currently do a fair imitation as I'm (still!) suffering from a cold!

Some loon somewhere will no doubt engage in 'corrective' surgery to obtain this affected vocal 'asset' - pity they don't understand that we'll all be laughing 'at' them, rather than 'with' them!

Unknown said...

Pass on away! I have never heard of this before but it sounds silly.

Donna K. Weaver said...

Dumb kids in their quest to be different. Ugh!

Chiz said...

I don't know anyone who practices speaking like that, but I know people who sound like that regularly. I never knew is was a speech disorder.

Johanna Garth said...

No, never heard of it before and never heard anyone do it!

Sarah Allen said...

Oh geez. I'd never heard of that before, but...why?

Sarah Allen
(my creative writing blog)

Nate Wilson said...

I'd heard of this once before, and yeah, I don't get it. Frankly, I don't understand most fads (e.g. pet rocks, those earrings that stretch out your ear lobes on purpose, Bieber, etc.)

Susan Bodendo/Super Earthling said...

Wow, Chuck, I really found this fascinating! While I've noticed that type of speech pattern I never thought about it much, or realized it actually had a name.

In fact, I think I've been doing it unintentionally for years. :-o Here I was, ahead of my time, and I never realized it. LOL

"I do believe Vocal Fry is now my favorite new term," she croaked. ;-)

Anonymous said...

I had no idea there was a name for it, but oh yeah, I've noticed it with more than a few local disc jockeys...

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Why?
I enjoy rock bands with singers who can growl their lyrics, but not a chance I'd try something like that. I'd hurt myself in five minutes.

Pat Tillett said...

I have not heard of this. I kinds of get it for singers, but that's it. When I hear that sound I think of a person who smokes a couple of packs a day....
I'm making that sound right now! I don't smoke, but I may try out for american idol some day, so....

Chuck said...

Nick: It sounds like how I sound when I first wake up in the morning - creaky and cranky!

Sue: You may have heard it and not known what you were listening to. I hear it more now that I am aware of the sound.

Clarissa: I agree.

Donna: It always has to be something.

Chiz: And you thought you had nothing to learn today!

Johanna: You will now if you think about it.

Sarah: I guess it's supposed to sound sexy and mysterious...don't know for sure.


Nate: You're dissing pet rocks...you know they vibrate when they talk back to you, right?

Earthling: I believe Vocal Fry is my favorite new band name!!

Milo: Yep you're right, DJ's use this voice all the time. Particularly on jazz stations.

Alex: I'm with you on that and how embarrassing would it be to go to the ER with a pulled vocal cord??

Pat: You are right about that...made my think of my grandmother with her two pack a day habit and fifty years of drinking scotch!

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