Abstract

Music generating computer programs can support jazz musicians and students during performance and practice, for instance by providing accompaniment for solo improvisation. However, such software typically plays sequences of static precomposed snippets and does not react to the user. In that context, it is hardly possible to determine whether such a system has any of its own creative powers. Within the scope of a user study with 20 participants, we evaluate and compare the mobile application iReal Pro to our own system, the evolutionary automatic and reactive system called ‘EAR Drummer’ that generates drum patterns as accompaniment to jazz solo improvisation. It adapts its behaviour in real-time by heuristic rules based on music properties derived from the user’s melodies. The user-based evaluation is performed by following the standardised procedure for evaluating creative systems (SPECS). The analysis of the results is based on a Linear Mixed Effects Model to consider fixed and random effects on the survey data. The model reveals that our system outperforms iReal Pro in all of SPECS’s partial components of creativity and significantly outperforms it for 7 of those 14 components including variety, originality, emotional involvement, and social interaction. Further, it is characterised as “better” and “more interesting” in the user survey. A conflicting observation is that while 70% of the study participants tend to prefer our more “creative” system as support for stage performances, only 40% find it more suitable for practice. Further analysis addresses differences between user groups defined by their played instrument, age, and musical experience.

Highlights

  • The art of musical improvisation is a natural way of expressing human inner creativity

  • Our aim is to determine how those computer music performances are perceived with special regard to the domain of jazz improvisation

  • 89 7075 stage all ED fans iR fans pianists guitarists. Others stated that they were driven into a creative mood by the improvisations of EAR Drummer

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Summary

Introduction

The art of musical improvisation is a natural way of expressing human inner creativity. “The activity of instantaneous creation is as ordinary to us as breathing” (Nachmanovitch, 1990, p.17). Many students are in constant search for literature like harmonic theory books that help in theoretical understanding. They look for more and more practice exercises that promise faster improvements of instrumental skills. Correlations of the attributes of age and years as improviser with the values of SPECS components and the Mean Ratings are examined. The attribute years as musician revealed no significant correlation. The attribute years as improviser correlates negatively to iReal’s SPECS components (lower rating the more years of improvising experience).

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