Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.

Musical rhythms performed by humans typically show temporal fluctuations. While they have been characterized in simple rhythmic tasks, it is an open question what is the nature of temporal fluctuations, when several musicians perform music jointly in all its natural complexity. To study such fluctua...

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Main Authors: Mathias Sogorski, Theo Geisel, Viola Priesemann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5783353?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-60e3444631ea4670af57704fa71a8e872020-11-24T21:27:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01131e018636110.1371/journal.pone.0186361Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.Mathias SogorskiTheo GeiselViola PriesemannMusical rhythms performed by humans typically show temporal fluctuations. While they have been characterized in simple rhythmic tasks, it is an open question what is the nature of temporal fluctuations, when several musicians perform music jointly in all its natural complexity. To study such fluctuations in over 100 original jazz and rock/pop recordings played with and without metronome we developed a semi-automated workflow allowing the extraction of cymbal beat onsets with millisecond precision. Analyzing the inter-beat interval (IBI) time series revealed evidence for two long-range correlated processes characterized by power laws in the IBI power spectral densities. One process dominates on short timescales (t < 8 beats) and reflects microtiming variability in the generation of single beats. The other dominates on longer timescales and reflects slow tempo variations. Whereas the latter did not show differences between musical genres (jazz vs. rock/pop), the process on short timescales showed higher variability for jazz recordings, indicating that jazz makes stronger use of microtiming fluctuations within a measure than rock/pop. Our results elucidate principles of rhythmic performance and can inspire algorithms for artificial music generation. By studying microtiming fluctuations in original music recordings, we bridge the gap between minimalistic tapping paradigms and expressive rhythmic performances.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5783353?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mathias Sogorski
Theo Geisel
Viola Priesemann
spellingShingle Mathias Sogorski
Theo Geisel
Viola Priesemann
Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mathias Sogorski
Theo Geisel
Viola Priesemann
author_sort Mathias Sogorski
title Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
title_short Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
title_full Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
title_fullStr Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
title_full_unstemmed Correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
title_sort correlated microtiming deviations in jazz and rock music.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Musical rhythms performed by humans typically show temporal fluctuations. While they have been characterized in simple rhythmic tasks, it is an open question what is the nature of temporal fluctuations, when several musicians perform music jointly in all its natural complexity. To study such fluctuations in over 100 original jazz and rock/pop recordings played with and without metronome we developed a semi-automated workflow allowing the extraction of cymbal beat onsets with millisecond precision. Analyzing the inter-beat interval (IBI) time series revealed evidence for two long-range correlated processes characterized by power laws in the IBI power spectral densities. One process dominates on short timescales (t < 8 beats) and reflects microtiming variability in the generation of single beats. The other dominates on longer timescales and reflects slow tempo variations. Whereas the latter did not show differences between musical genres (jazz vs. rock/pop), the process on short timescales showed higher variability for jazz recordings, indicating that jazz makes stronger use of microtiming fluctuations within a measure than rock/pop. Our results elucidate principles of rhythmic performance and can inspire algorithms for artificial music generation. By studying microtiming fluctuations in original music recordings, we bridge the gap between minimalistic tapping paradigms and expressive rhythmic performances.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5783353?pdf=render
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AT theogeisel correlatedmicrotimingdeviationsinjazzandrockmusic
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