Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.

Harmony is a fundamental attribute of music. Close connections exist between music and mathematics since both pursue harmony and unity. In music, the consonance of notes played simultaneously partly determines our perception of harmony; associates with aesthetic responses; and influences the emotion...

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Main Authors: Dan Wu, Keith M Kendrick, Daniel J Levitin, Chaoyi Li, Dezhong Yao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4636347?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1e81ce24e2054d02a7b276eadc8473732020-11-24T20:49:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e014243110.1371/journal.pone.0142431Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.Dan WuKeith M KendrickDaniel J LevitinChaoyi LiDezhong YaoHarmony is a fundamental attribute of music. Close connections exist between music and mathematics since both pursue harmony and unity. In music, the consonance of notes played simultaneously partly determines our perception of harmony; associates with aesthetic responses; and influences the emotion expression. The consonance could be considered as a window to understand and analyze harmony. Here for the first time we used a 1/f fluctuation analysis to investigate whether the consonance fluctuation structure in music with a wide range of composers and genres followed the scale free pattern that has been found for pitch, melody, rhythm, human body movements, brain activity, natural images and geographical features. We then used a network graph approach to investigate which composers were the most influential both within and across genres. Our results showed that patterns of consonance in music did follow scale-free characteristics, suggesting that this feature is a universally evolved one in both music and the living world. Furthermore, our network analysis revealed that Bach's harmony patterns were having the most influence on those used by other composers, followed closely by Mozart.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4636347?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dan Wu
Keith M Kendrick
Daniel J Levitin
Chaoyi Li
Dezhong Yao
spellingShingle Dan Wu
Keith M Kendrick
Daniel J Levitin
Chaoyi Li
Dezhong Yao
Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Dan Wu
Keith M Kendrick
Daniel J Levitin
Chaoyi Li
Dezhong Yao
author_sort Dan Wu
title Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
title_short Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
title_full Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
title_fullStr Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
title_full_unstemmed Bach Is the Father of Harmony: Revealed by a 1/f Fluctuation Analysis across Musical Genres.
title_sort bach is the father of harmony: revealed by a 1/f fluctuation analysis across musical genres.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Harmony is a fundamental attribute of music. Close connections exist between music and mathematics since both pursue harmony and unity. In music, the consonance of notes played simultaneously partly determines our perception of harmony; associates with aesthetic responses; and influences the emotion expression. The consonance could be considered as a window to understand and analyze harmony. Here for the first time we used a 1/f fluctuation analysis to investigate whether the consonance fluctuation structure in music with a wide range of composers and genres followed the scale free pattern that has been found for pitch, melody, rhythm, human body movements, brain activity, natural images and geographical features. We then used a network graph approach to investigate which composers were the most influential both within and across genres. Our results showed that patterns of consonance in music did follow scale-free characteristics, suggesting that this feature is a universally evolved one in both music and the living world. Furthermore, our network analysis revealed that Bach's harmony patterns were having the most influence on those used by other composers, followed closely by Mozart.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4636347?pdf=render
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