Publication | Closed Access
Mapping musical thought to musical performance.
274
Citations
20
References
1989
Year
MusicRubato PatternsCognitive ScienceComputational MusicologyMusic CognitionAlgorithmic CompositionArtsExpressive Timing PatternsSocial SciencesMusical AnalysisExpressive Timing MethodsMusic PsychologyMusical ThoughtMusic ProcessingMusicology
Expressive timing methods are described that map pianists' musical thoughts to sounded performance. In Experiment 1, 6 pianists performed the same musical excerpt on a computer-monitored keyboard. Each performance contained 3 expressive timing patterns: chord asynchronies, rubato patterns, and overlaps (staccato and legato). Each pattern was strongest in experienced pianists' performances and decreased when pianists attempted to play unmusically. In Experiment 2 pianists performed another musical excerpt and notated their musical intentions on an unedited score. The notated interpretations correlated with the presence of the 3 methods: The notated melody preceded other events in chords (chord asynchrony); events notated as phase boundaries showed greatest tempo changes (rubato); and the notated melody showed most consistent amount of overlap between adjacent events (staccato and legato). These results suggest that the mapping of musical thought to musical action is rule-governed, and the same rules produce different interpretations.
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