2018
DOI: 10.1108/tpm-09-2016-0041
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Conductorless singing group: a particular kind of self-managed team?

Abstract: Purpose: Coordination of group activity is rarely more important than in a singing group that has no designated conductor. This paper aims to explore the group dynamics in an 11-man singing group whose members, all over 60, have without exception occupied senior leadership positions in their working careers. The study arose because responses to a wider research study revealed interesting perceptions of leadership issues in the group. Design/methodology/approach: All the members participated in semi-structured … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…In this study, we conceptualized musical leadership as manifested in musicians’ head-motion. Such a tendency to anticipate or lag somebody else’s head motion is certainly not a comprehensive view of leadership, which is studied often in terms of social roles (Garrido & Requena, 2015 ; King, 2006 ; Lim, 2014 ; Page-Shipp et al, 2018 ) rather than body motion’s phase synchronicity. Future mixed studies might further advance our understanding of leadership in ensembles, by analysing patterns in verbal social interactions during rehearsals in combination with sound and body motion synchronization.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this study, we conceptualized musical leadership as manifested in musicians’ head-motion. Such a tendency to anticipate or lag somebody else’s head motion is certainly not a comprehensive view of leadership, which is studied often in terms of social roles (Garrido & Requena, 2015 ; King, 2006 ; Lim, 2014 ; Page-Shipp et al, 2018 ) rather than body motion’s phase synchronicity. Future mixed studies might further advance our understanding of leadership in ensembles, by analysing patterns in verbal social interactions during rehearsals in combination with sound and body motion synchronization.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A professional worker will most likely derive work identity from the organization-related activities and interactions. A previous study reported that a member of a singing group concluded to have identity as organizer of the teamsince the person committed to managing the team's activities (Page-Shipp et al, 2018). In terms of team performance, Boerner et al (2004) suggested that orchestral musicians need to be cooperative as team players, in order to give artistic quality to the music.…”
Section: Work Identity At the Organizational Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%