Abstract

Accents are local musical events that attract the attention of the listener, and can be either immanent (evident from the score) or performed (added by the performer). Immanent accents involve temporal grouping (phrasing), meter, melody, and harmony; performed accents involve changes in timing, dynamics, articulation, and timbre. In the past, grouping, metrical and melodic accents were investigated in the context of expressive music performance. We present a novel computational model of immanent accent salience in tonal music that automatically predicts the positions and saliences of metrical, melodic and harmonic accents. The model extends previous research by improving on preliminary formulations of metrical and melodic accents and introducing a new model for harmonic accents that combines harmonic dissonance and harmonic surprise. In an analysis-by-synthesis approach, model predictions were compared with data from two experiments, respectively involving 239 sonorities and 638 sonorities, and 16 musicians and 5 experts in music theory. Average pair-wise correlations between raters were lower for metrical (0.27) and melodic accents (0.37) than for harmonic accents (0.49). In both experiments, when combining all the raters into a single measure expressing their consensus, correlations between ratings and model predictions ranged from 0.43 to 0.62. When different accent categories of accents were combined together, correlations were higher than for separate categories (r = 0.66). This suggests that raters might use strategies different from individual metrical, melodic or harmonic accent models to mark the musical events.

Highlights

  • An important aspect of structure in classical Western music is the accent: a local event that attracts a listener’s attention

  • We present a novel computational model of immanent accent salience in tonal music, which extends and improves previous research in the following ways

  • We describe an algorithmic approach to the automatic analysis of musical score that is based on accents, as obtained by analysis by synthesis starting from the above-described experiments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An important aspect of structure in classical Western music is the accent: a local event that attracts a listener’s attention. Accents can be either evident from the score (immanent) or added by the performer (performed) (Parncutt, 2003). In both cases, the perceptual salience of an accent may be defined as its perceptual importance, or the degree to which it attracts a listener’s attention. They are associated with grouping (phrasing), meter, melody and harmony

Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.