Blame the Beatles.
From left, Beatles John Lennon, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, and Paul McCartney in April 1964 Photo by AFP/GettyImages.
For the newest James Bond movie, Skyfall, English singer Adele recorded a song with the same name. Though Adele speaks with a strong London accent, her singing voice sounds more American than British. Why do British vocalists often sound American when they sing?
Because that’s the way everyone expects pop and rock musicians to sound. British pop singers have been imitating American pronunciations since Cliff Richard, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones began recording in the 1960s.* These musicians were largely influenced by the African-American Vernacular English of black American blues and rock and roll singers like Chuck Berry, but their faux-American dialects usually comprised aspects of several American dialects. Imitating an American accent involved both the adoption of American vowel sounds and rhoticity: the pronunciation of r’s wherever they appear in a word. (Nonrhoticity, by contrast, is the habit of dropping r’s at the end of a syllable, as most dialects of England do.) Sometimes Brits attempting to sing in an American style went overboard with the r’s, as did Paul McCartney in his cover of “Till There Was You,” pronouncing saw more like sawr.
Linguist Peter Trudgill tracked rhoticity in British rock music over
the years and found that the Beatles’ pronunciation of r’s decreased
over the course of the 1960s, settling into a trans-Atlantic sound that
incorporated aspects of both British and American dialects. The trend
also went in the opposite direction as new genres developed: American
pop-punk vocalists like Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day took on a
British-tinged accent to sound more like seminal artists such as Joe
Strummer of the Clash. Contemporary singers continue to adopt various
accents according to their genre; Keith Urban, who is Australian, sings
country music with a marked American Southern accent. A recent study
suggests that the default singing accent for New Zealand pop singers
utilizes American vowel sounds, even when the singers aren’t trying to
sound American, perhaps because today’s singers were brought up
listening to American (and imitation-American) pop vocals.
Even when singers aren’t trying to imitate a particular vocal style associated with a genre, regional dialects tend to get lost in song:
Intonation is superseded by melody, vowel length by the duration of
each note, and vocal cadences by a song’s rhythm. This makes vowel
sounds and rhoticity all the more important in conveying accent in song.
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