Can you tell the difference? A 2000 study led by R.S. Wolpert - TopicsExpress



          

Can you tell the difference? A 2000 study led by R.S. Wolpert found that non-musicians couldn’t distinguish between monotonal and bitonal music played side-by-side. Meanwhile musicians found artificially-created bitonal music to be almost unlistenable. For most non-musicians, if they heard anything wrong with the clips, they typically said they were being played too fast, or mentioned some other unrelated concept. But Mayumi Hamamoto, Mauro Bothelo, and Margaret Munger (AKA Greta) wondered if years of musical training were really necessary for non-musicians to hear bitonal music. Bitonality is actually a bit controversial in the world of music, and it can be a little hard to define. In principle, there’s a difference between bitonality and just playing or singing off-key, but in practice, the difference may not even exist. Advocates of bitonality like to point to the works of composers like Milhaud, Bartók, Prokofiev, and Strauss. These composers deliberately wrote in two different musical keys. But how is that different from occasionally or regularly writing dissonant chords? After all, all the same notes can be written using any musical key. To be truly bitonal, advocates say the two separate parts must unfold independently in different keys. This results in a distinctive “crunch” when the music is played. The separate question is, is this noticeable? Wolpert’s work shows that it is, at least for trained musicians. Hamamoto’s team replicated Wolpert’s study by playing altered and original clips of familiar songs like the above example to three groups of undergraduates: “Musicians” with more than 5 years of training, “Amateur Musicians” with 1 to 5 years of training, and “Non-Musicians” with less than a year of training. There were 14 students in each group. Musicians were significantly better at noticing that the modified clips were bitonal or “out of tune.” scienceblogs/cognitivedaily/2010/01/20/bitonality/
Posted on: Wed, 23 Jul 2014 18:30:17 +0000

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