Research has used the normalized pairwise variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between musical rhythm and durational contrast in composers’ native languages. Applying this methodology, linearly increasing nPVI in Austro-German, but not Italian music has recently been ascribed to waning Italian and increasing German influence on Austro-German music after the Baroque Era. The inapplicability of controlled experimental methods to historical data necessitates further replication with more sensitive methods and new repertoire. Using novel polynomial modelling procedures, we demonstrate an initial increase and a subsequent decrease in nPVI in music by 34 French composers. Moreover, previous findings for 21 Austro-German (linear increase) and 15 Italian composers (no change) are replicated. Our results provide promissory quantitative support for accounts from historical musicology of an Italian-dominated Baroque (1600-1750), a Classical Era (1750-1820) with Austro-German centres of gravity (e.g., Mannheim, Vienna), and a Romantic Era (1820-1900) with greater national independence. Future studies should aim to replicate these findings with larger corpora with greater historical representability.
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April 2016
Research Article|
April 01 2016
Nonlinear Changes in the Rhythm of European Art Music: Quantitative Support for Historical Musicology
Niels Chr. Hansen,
Aarhus University & The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus/Aalborg, Denmark
Niels Chr. Hansen, Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus University Hospital, Nørrebrogade 44, Building 10G, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark. E-mail: nch@musikkons.dk
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Makiko Sadakata,
Makiko Sadakata
University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Marcus Pearce
Marcus Pearce
Queen Mary, University of London, London, United Kingdom
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Niels Chr. Hansen, Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus University Hospital, Nørrebrogade 44, Building 10G, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark. E-mail: nch@musikkons.dk
Music Perception (2016) 33 (4): 414–431.
Article history
Received:
May 17 2014
Accepted:
January 09 2015
Citation
Niels Chr. Hansen, Makiko Sadakata, Marcus Pearce; Nonlinear Changes in the Rhythm of European Art Music: Quantitative Support for Historical Musicology. Music Perception 1 April 2016; 33 (4): 414–431. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/mp.2016.33.4.414
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