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Articles

Is Vivaldi smooth and takete? Non-verbal sensory scales for describing music qualities

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Pages 359-372 | Received 31 Dec 2014, Accepted 11 Sep 2015, Published online: 28 Oct 2015
 

Abstract

Studies on the perception of music qualities (such as induced or perceived emotions, performance styles, or timbre nuances) make a large use of verbal descriptors. Although many authors noted that particular music qualities can hardly be described by means of verbal labels, few studies have tried alternatives. This paper aims at exploring the use of non-verbal sensory scales, in order to represent different perceived qualities in Western classical music. Musically trained and untrained listeners were required to listen to six musical excerpts in major key and to evaluate them from a sensorial and semantic point of view (Experiment 1). The same design (Experiment 2) was conducted using musically trained and untrained listeners who were required to listen to six musical excerpts in minor key. The overall findings indicate that subjects’ ratings on non-verbal sensory scales are consistent throughout and the results support the hypothesis that sensory scales can convey some specific sensations that cannot be described verbally, offering interesting insights to deepen our knowledge on the relationship between music and other sensorial experiences. Such research can foster interesting applications in the field of music information retrieval and timbre spaces explorations together with experiments applied to different musical cultures and contexts.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to acknowledge Prof. Emery Schubert, School of the Arts and Media, University of New South Wales, and Prof. Alessandro Paccagnella, Dept. of Information Engineering, University of Padova, for helpful discussions and suggestions.

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