Transpositions Within User-Posted YouTube Lyric Videos: A Corpus Study

There are many practical reasons why experiences of a given musical work tend to be heard repeatedly at the same pitch transposition level, especially recordings of musical works. Yet here, a corpus study is presented that challenges this very basic assumption of music perception. In 2011, an init...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joseph Plazak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2016-07-01
Series:Empirical Musicology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v11i1.4972
Description
Summary:There are many practical reasons why experiences of a given musical work tend to be heard repeatedly at the same pitch transposition level, especially recordings of musical works. Yet here, a corpus study is presented that challenges this very basic assumption of music perception. In 2011, an initial corpus of 100 user-posted YouTube videos was collected in order to investigate the prevalence of transposition and tempo alterations within these videos. Results found 42% of these videos contained nominal changes of pitch (36%) and/or tempo (22%). Using the same methodology, a follow-up study was performed in 2015 and found only that 24% of user-posted videos contained these same alterations. Implications for these observations are discussed in light of musical communication models, YouTubeology, and absolute pitch memory.
ISSN:1559-5749