{"title":"Interval patterns are dependent on metrical position in jazz solos","authors":"P. Cross, Andrew Goldman","doi":"10.1177/10298649211033973","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"During jazz improvisation, performers employ short recurrent musical motifs called licks. Past research has focused on the pitch, intervallic, and rhythmic characteristics of licks, but less attention has been paid to whether they tend to start in the same place within the measure (metrical dependence). Licks might be metrically dependent, and where a given lick starts in a measure (metrical position) may thus be part of the performer’s mental representation of that lick. Here we report the use of a corpus study to investigate whether licks are metrically dependent. We analyzed a subset of solos, all those in 4/4 time (n = 435), from the Weimar Jazz Database (WJD; Pfleiderer et al., 2017). Using a sliding window technique, we identified melodic sequences (interval n-grams) between 3 and 10 intervals in length. We counted the number of times each interval n-gram occurred, and noted the metrical position of the initial note of each occurrence, using different levels of quantization (8th and 16th note). We compared the entropy of the distribution of metrical positions for each n-gram—with lower values indicating a stronger metrical dependence—against simulated counterparts that assumed no relationship between an n-gram and its metrical position (no metrical dependence). Overall, we found that shorter n-grams were metrically dependent, with varying results for longer n-grams. We suggest two possible explanations: either mental representations of licks may encode their metrical features or the metrical position may make certain licks more accessible to the performer. On the basis of our findings we discuss future studies that could employ our methods.","PeriodicalId":47219,"journal":{"name":"Musicae Scientiae","volume":"15 1","pages":"299 - 312"},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2021-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Musicae Scientiae","FirstCategoryId":"102","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/10298649211033973","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"心理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"MUSIC","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
During jazz improvisation, performers employ short recurrent musical motifs called licks. Past research has focused on the pitch, intervallic, and rhythmic characteristics of licks, but less attention has been paid to whether they tend to start in the same place within the measure (metrical dependence). Licks might be metrically dependent, and where a given lick starts in a measure (metrical position) may thus be part of the performer’s mental representation of that lick. Here we report the use of a corpus study to investigate whether licks are metrically dependent. We analyzed a subset of solos, all those in 4/4 time (n = 435), from the Weimar Jazz Database (WJD; Pfleiderer et al., 2017). Using a sliding window technique, we identified melodic sequences (interval n-grams) between 3 and 10 intervals in length. We counted the number of times each interval n-gram occurred, and noted the metrical position of the initial note of each occurrence, using different levels of quantization (8th and 16th note). We compared the entropy of the distribution of metrical positions for each n-gram—with lower values indicating a stronger metrical dependence—against simulated counterparts that assumed no relationship between an n-gram and its metrical position (no metrical dependence). Overall, we found that shorter n-grams were metrically dependent, with varying results for longer n-grams. We suggest two possible explanations: either mental representations of licks may encode their metrical features or the metrical position may make certain licks more accessible to the performer. On the basis of our findings we discuss future studies that could employ our methods.
在爵士乐的即兴演奏中,表演者使用被称为“舔”的短而重复的音乐主题。过去的研究主要集中在舔音的音高、音程和节奏特征上,但很少关注它们是否倾向于在拍子内的同一位置开始(韵律依赖)。舔舐可能是依赖于节拍的,一个给定的舔舐在一个小节(格律位置)开始,因此可能是演奏者对这个舔舐的心理表征的一部分。在这里,我们报告使用语料库研究来调查舔是否度量依赖。我们分析了来自魏玛爵士数据库(WJD;Pfleiderer et al., 2017)。使用滑动窗口技术,我们确定了长度在3到10个音程之间的旋律序列(音程n-gram)。我们计算了每个音程n-gram出现的次数,并使用不同的量化级别(8和16音符)记录了每次出现的初始音符的格律位置。我们比较了每个n-gram的度量位置分布的熵-较低的值表明更强的度量依赖-与假设n-gram与其度量位置之间没有关系的模拟对应(无度量依赖)。总的来说,我们发现较短的n-gram与度量相关,较长的n-gram的结果不同。我们提出了两种可能的解释:对拍子的心理表征可能编码了它们的格律特征,或者格律的位置可能使演奏者更容易理解某些拍子。在我们的发现的基础上,我们讨论了可以采用我们的方法的未来研究。