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Original Articles

Classification of Music Genres Based on Repetitive Basslines

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Pages 239-257 | Published online: 05 Jul 2012
 

Abstract

In this paper, we present a comparative study of three different classification paradigms for genre classification based on repetitive basslines. In spite of a large variety in terms of instrumentation, a bass instrument can be found in most music genres. Thus, the bass track can be analysed to explore stylistic similarities between music genres. We present an extensive set of transcription-based high-level features related to rhythm and tonality that allows one to characterize basslines on a symbolic level. Traditional classification techniques based on pattern recognition techniques and audio features are compared with rule-based classification and classification based on the similarity between basslines. We use a novel dataset that consists of typical basslines of 13 music genres from different cultural backgrounds for evaluation purposes. Finally, the genre confusion results obtained in the experiments are examined by musicologists. Our study shows that several known stylistic relationships between music genres could be verified that way by classifying typical basslines. We could achieve a highest accuracy value of 64.8% for the genre classification solely based on repetitive basslines of a song.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Christian Dittmar for valuable comments. This work has been partly supported by the German research project GlobalMusic2One Footnote1funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF-FKZ: 01/S08039B). Additionally, the Thuringian Ministry of Economy, Employment and Technology supported this research by granting funds of the European Fund for Regional Development to the project Songs2See Footnote2, enabling transnational cooperation between Thuringian companies and their partners from other European regions.

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