english coach Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 Sweden produces some great singers and musicians but sometimes when they sing in English the pronunciation leaves a little to be desired. The most common problem is the English 'y' sound as in 'you', which because of the Swedish sound of a 'j'comes out as 'jou'. I'm here to coach you out of that if you'd like.
Tracer Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 (redigerat) How would you define the differance between the pronounciation of the english 'Y' and the swedish 'J' in a word like 'you'. I don't think we are pronouncing the word 'you' like 'jew' if that's what you are implying. Elaborate, please. Redigerat 18 februari 2011 av Tracer
Jetblack Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 "Jou hÀvve a verry verry svidish uttal!" -Peter Svartling i "Idol" ("You have a very very swedish pronounciation") 1
english coach Postat 18 februari 2011 TrÄdstartare Postat 18 februari 2011 sorry but I often hear you as jew. Spoken and sung. However I'm not trying to offend. Most Swedes speak better English than I will ever speak Swedish. I'm just here to assist if anyone feels they need it. I earn a reasonable part of my living doing it.
Jetblack Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 It would be wise to take advice from an expert when it comes to pronounciating english. You seldom hear a swede speak english without that certain swedish accent. Mostly it sounds like the "Swedish Chef" of the Muppets ;P (I don't claim to be better.) I heared a russian group singing in swedish (!). I immediately reacted to some minor errors in the pronouncitation. Is that what the english-speaking hear when swedes (and other non-english speaking) are trying to sing in english...? 1
Linus Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 I'm here to coach you out of that if you'd like.Cool, how about telling us a bit about yourself? 1
pikzel Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 I agree to some extent, but it should be said that the swedes are among the best at pronunciation in the world. That being said, one could always improve.
Jetblack Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 đ± Ja men jag sa ju att jag inte pĂ„stĂ„r att jag Ă€r bĂ€ttre, varför tror du att jag gör instrumentalmusik? ;P
Radiobrutta Postat 18 februari 2011 Postat 18 februari 2011 Cool, how about telling us a bit about yourself? I think youÂŽd be better of in Samarbeten
Piccazzo Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 (redigerat) Though your offer of assistance if great i cant see how this will work over the internet ? đ And i totally agree about the " You " part , ThatÂŽs way i always write down it as a " U ". Helps a lot when your recording a vocalist that isnÂŽt 100% in their pronunciation and reads the lyrics of the paper. As well as " Daun / Down " Sharty / Shorty " " Gal / Girl " etc . It think the education we get in school contributes to the problem as we are taught to Articulate and that donÂŽt always translate well to singing. But the biggest problem insÂŽt the pronunciation itÂŽs that when an American or English sings it sounds more effortless and fluent than when non english speaking artist sings in english.Especially when you doing a track that has a faster tempo Redigerat 19 februari 2011 av Piccazzo
english coach Postat 19 februari 2011 TrÄdstartare Postat 19 februari 2011 Ok, I've been asked to say a bit about myself. I fear this is going to read like bragging so before anyone criticises me for it, I WAS asked and it's hard to leave bits out. I began my career as an actor in England playing classical roles but always had music as a sideline.I was also the first dialect teacher at the drama school I was trained at. After several years of the usual struggle, I was invited to tour a play in Sweden, which I did. That was 1980. I returned to England the end of that year and was unemployed apart from reading a couple of short stories for BBC radio. Sound, especially different dialects has always been a preferable speciality where I'm concerned. In March '81 I was asked to tour another play in Sweden and to cut a very long story short, a wife, 3 adult children and a divorce later, I'm still here!! I began writing songs, doing trubabur gigs and generally getting more and more into the music scene as time went by. I've missed selection for the Eurovision thing like missing a train by 2 minutes, chucked out at the 11th hour!! I've writen with 3 different co writers and I continue to do so with 2 of em. I've played in Nashville and Hong Kong, to name 2 extreme sort of exotic places. I narrate info and education films, create character voices for cartoons made by Swedish production companies hoping for success abroad. I've acted in a couple of Swedish movies one of which I co wrote and performed the theme song for. A particlarly bloody action thriller which is basically rubbish and I'm not proud of it ....and tv programmes. I have 2 voiced commercials runnning in Sweden right now. One on radio in Swedish with my appalling Swedish accent but that's what they wanted- an exaggerated 'brytning'. I said I don't have to overdo it. It's what you get! Plus a tv commercial for a bank, where I post synced a Swedish actor with a southern States drawl. Finally I teach English conversation part time at Medborgarskolan.
Rabieshund Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 (redigerat) Plus a tv commercial for a bank, where I post synced a Swedish actor with a southern States drawl. Haha, is it that one with a guy recieving an ownership of some oil company? Awesome. đ Redigerat 19 februari 2011 av Rabieshund
english coach Postat 19 februari 2011 TrÄdstartare Postat 19 februari 2011 That's the one! The guy watering his lawn is informed he's inherited a bundle form a relative in the States.
Drake Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 Sweden produces some great singers and musicians but sometimes when they sing in English the pronunciation leaves a little to be desired. The most common problem is the English 'y' sound as in 'you', which because of the Swedish sound of a 'j'comes out as 'jou'. I'm here to coach you out of that if you'd like. ...but the biggest problem is when Swedes pronounce West Bromwich... Tipslördag, anyone?
laxlaxlax Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 In my opinion dialect of all kind is nice and should be preserved! Even English with Swedish accent.
Piccazzo Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 Even English with Swedish accent. Swenglish... đ In my opinion dialect of all kind is nice and should be preserved! Even English with Swedish accent In speech i agree , In music iÂŽm not so sure.
barrf Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 In speech i agree , In music iÂŽm not so sure. How good would Björk sound without her weird icelandic pronunciation? Or Karin Dreijer for that matter? Sometimes it just sounds awesome đ„°
Jetblack Postat 19 februari 2011 Postat 19 februari 2011 How good would Björk sound without her weird icelandic pronunciation? Or Karin Dreijer for that matter? Sometimes it just sounds awesome đ„° Björk skulle nog inte vinna nĂ„got pĂ„ att rĂ€tta till sitt uttal, det Ă€r en del av hennes sound! Dreijers engelska uttal har jag dĂ€remot stört mig pĂ„ Ă€nda sedan jag hörde Honey is Cool första gĂ„ngen... (Help Dreijer, but not Björk!)
Vallhagen Postat 20 februari 2011 Postat 20 februari 2011 Sweden produces some great singers and musicians but sometimes when they sing in English the pronunciation leaves a little to be desired. The most common problem is the English 'y' sound as in 'you', which because of the Swedish sound of a 'j'comes out as 'jou'. I'm here to coach you out of that if you'd like. Tjena English Coach. Ditt Àmne syftar visserligen mot anglofiering, men vi kör diskussionerna hÀr pÄ svenska. Enklast sÄ, och det stÄr dessutom i forumreglerna. mvh Bengan
Svencanz Postat 20 februari 2011 Postat 20 februari 2011 Jag har ju bott i Nya Zeeland i manga ar nu, och jag kan intyga att det finns sma skillnader i spraket som man som icke-Engelsk-fodd helt enkelt inte hor forst. Det tog mig ett ar att hora skillnad pa Nya Zeelandska och Australiska. Exempelvis ar 'cheap' och 'sheep' helt olika ord; och som vanlig svensk har man problem med detta forst. Uttalet alltsa. Tonande 'ess' kan ocksa vara ett problem: Kanon historia var nar jag tanke jag skulle aka till Wellington's djurpark det forsta aret. Gick pa bussen och sade: 'one ticket to the zoo, please.' Trodde jag alltsa. Just eftersom jag inte uttalade det TONANDE esset, sa fattade buss chaffisen ingenting. Sade min mening tre ggr, men fick ga av bussen. Jag vart sa paff att jag inte kom pa att saga: 'you know the place where they have lots on animals in cages...' - det hade sakert blivit ganska kul om jag sagt det. Men nu blev det endast en 'konstig upplevelse...' I svenskan har vi ett pa liknande grejer. Sma skillnader som ger helt olika ord; tomten och tomten, stegen och stegen. S
GĂ€st Postat 20 februari 2011 Postat 20 februari 2011 Det tog mig ett ar att hora skillnad pa Nya Zeelandska och Australiska. Diggar den meningen đ
therocker Postat 20 februari 2011 Postat 20 februari 2011 Perfekt uttal och sprÄkbruk vita tÀnder och perfekt "pitch", jeeesus va trist det blir...... nÀ heder Ät dom som vÄgar sÀtta lite personlig prÀgel pÄ sin musik.
Radiobrutta Postat 22 februari 2011 Postat 22 februari 2011 (redigerat) Synd att lĂ€sa alla avarter av konstiga och spydiga svar hĂ€r pĂ„ detta Ă€mne. English coach vill faktiskt, i all vĂ€lmening, erbjuda sin hjĂ€lp till dem som kan kĂ€nna ett behov av detta. Inget konstigt med det. Trodde att Studioforumets medlemmar var aningen mer civilicerade Ă€n vad ni visar er vara hĂ€r. Jag förstĂ„r att vissa kanske inte kĂ€nner nĂ„n nytta av detta erbjudande frĂ„n english coach, men ni behöver dĂ€rför inte heller svara och spy ner detta Ă€mne med era aviga svar. đ Ăr man en seriöst satsande sĂ„ngare/sĂ„ngerska/skĂ„dis m.m sĂ„ vill man förmodligen Ă€ven utveckla det sprĂ„ket man förmedlar sitt budskap med. Ett litet exempel frĂ„n "verkligheten": Alla ni som tittat pĂ„ "Idol" och hört hur Bagge & Co sĂ„gar en Idol p.g.a sitt dĂ„liga engelska uttal; strĂ€ck upp en hand!! â ïž Just sayinÂŽ ! Redigerat 22 februari 2011 av Radiobrutta
Tracer Postat 22 februari 2011 Postat 22 februari 2011 Jag absolut ingenting emot att English coach (EC) vill hjÀlpa till med uttal och liknande. Tycker tvÀrtom att det Àr vÀldigt positivt nÀr nÄgon vill dela med sig av sina kunskaper. Det enda jag ifrÄgasatte var det exempel som han lade fram dÄ jag sÀllan eller aldrig uppfattat att svenskar uttalar 'you' med ett tydligt D i början som uttalet pÄ 'jew'. DÀremot har jag hört ord som 'birthday' bli 'burfday', 'this' bli 'diss' och liknande. Just TH-ljudet i engelskan verkar vara ett stort problem för mÄnga. Y-ljudet uttalas nÀstan exakt som svenska J och ordet 'you' lÄter nÀstan exakt som ordet 'jo', det var enbart dÀrför jag tyckte det var ett konstigt exempel att börja med. Det var inte menat som kritik gentemot ECs initiativ utan bara en förfrÄgan att han skulle utveckla sitt exempel, vilket han ocksÄ gjorde sen. Jag hoppas verkligen inte att EC tar det som negativ kritik. Hans hjÀlp kommer nog bli vÀldigt uppskattad av de som kÀnner sig manade att bÀttra pÄ sitt uttal.
nilsL Postat 22 februari 2011 Postat 22 februari 2011 (redigerat) Sweden produces some great singers and musicians but sometimes when they sing in English the pronunciation leaves a little to be desired. The most common problem is the English 'y' sound as in 'you', which because of the Swedish sound of a 'j'comes out as 'jou'. I'm here to coach you out of that if you'd like. Hi english coach, are you sure about that. I haven't given much thought how Swedish singers in particular pronounce this, but in my view it's in everyday conversations far more common that people do the opposite, i.e. pronounce "Jill" as "Yill". This makes sense to me since there is no such sound in the Swedish language, which means that there is a general tendancy to simplify it into something that people are familiar with. Nils Redigerat 22 februari 2011 av nilsL
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