Posts tagged pop

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John Kannenberg: Terry Riley’s In C (in four minutes)

on Monsters of Experimental Music, Vol. 1

Monsters of Experimental Music, Vol. 1 is a collection of well-known pieces of experimental music, curated by John Kannenberg, and condensed down into four minutes each. While the average song length quoted in iPod ads is four minutes, most experimental music takes much longer, and Kannenberg squeezes these pieces until they fit the pop mold.

It is an efficiently thought-provoking work, conceptually prodding at notions of curation via reference to popular culture, while not neglecting the actual sonic features of the pieces. (Now That’s What I Call Music! is on release #31 in the US…) The density of Riley’s In C works particularly well with the speeding-up process, but I also recommend his version of my personal favorite, Alvin Lucier’s I am sitting in a room.

You can download the whole thing for free.

Machines to Listen for You

A recent story on NPR’s Morning Edition describes a new software system to analyze songs for hit potential. Quoth Music Intelligence Solutions CEO David Meredith:

“[It’s] a series of algorithms that we use to look at what’s the potential of a song to be sticky with a listener,” Meredith says. “To have those patterns in the music that would correspond with what human brain waves would find pleasing.”

Meredith’s software uses algorithms to model how a brain finds “pleasure.” Even putting aside the strange attribution of taste to brain waves (as opposed to just the brain, or—I don’t know—the person?), this model has a lot in it to talk about. First off, the idea that pleasure is caused by “patterns in the music.”

What kind of patterns is he talking about?

Meredith says his software found that hits have certain common patterns of rhythm, harmony, chord progression, length and lyrics.

The choosing of parameters, even seemingly innocuous ones like “rhythm” and “harmony,” is an interpretive move. These parameters define the way the software can “hear,” grouping or separating various songs in contingent ways. Of course the story is vague about how exactly the software parses patterns in “lyrics” or “length”—you wouldn’t want to give up any trade secrets. But let’s take length as an easy one.

How would you incorporate length into an evaluation of a song’s “hit score?” It’s presumably a single number. Is shorter better? Maybe the ideal length is determined by a relationship to the various other scores? How do you extract a hit rating from it? By embedding these questions in software, Music Intelligence Solutions obscures them. The software must have a methodology, just as the music critic would, but since it outputs a score—7.6 out of ten is apparently “good for a platinum rating”—this methodology goes unexamined.

David Bell, of the hip-hop duo the Block Scholars, paid $90 to use it.
“To me, it’s an unbiased validation of your music,” Bell says. “It’s not your family turning around and saying, ‘Oh, you got a great song.’”

The computer told Bell he had a 7.1 — good, but not great. So he went back to the studio and remixed. He got his score up to 7.6 — good for a platinum rating. He could hold his head up.

The software configures musical production in a particular and contingent way. Bell produces a song, the machine evaluates it, he remixes, and the machine reevaluates. In the context of evaluative software, the labor of remixing is a negotiation with the machine.

The assumption is that the machine that turns music into numbers, processes them, and gives back a number, must be “unbiased.” By displacing evaluation from people to “a series of algorithms,” Music Intelligence Solutions banks on the obscuring power of technology: “your family” has bias, but a machine does not. Of course, the workings of the machine are entirely sculpted by bias. Each decision about what matters in a song is tweaked and informed by the programmers. The algorithms do not make themselves, nor do they decide which musical traits are significant.

Objectivity is produced through the use of numbers and software interfaces. Technologically mediated bias becomes objective evaluation. Software like Music Intelligence’s UPlaya propagates a certain view of what “hits” are, and even exceptions to the rule are integrated into a particular musical viewpoint:

It doesn’t surprise New Yorker music critic Sasha Frere-Jones that a computer can predict hits, but he says it can’t predict all the hits. Sometimes, songs come along that don’t fit the mold.

Songs that are popular in spite of their evaluation results (Frere-Jones uses the example of “Da Da Da” by Trio) become songs “that don’t fit the mold.” Now, not fitting the mold is another story about how songs become popular. On one side, we have software to account for certain kinds of success (like “I Gotta Feeling” by The Black Eyed Peas—8.9 out of 10), and on the other, a popular cultural myth about the appeal of mold-breaking. Evaluative software recasts songs that don’t meet its model as part of another cultural narrative.

Is this something to worry about? Probably not. For the integration of taste into business decisions, numbers can be very useful—they turn the the qualitative into the quantitative, with its sheen of objectivity. For listeners, though, I find it hard to imagine that you’ll be seeing ads for “The new Britney Spears: 9.1 out of 10 on the hit scale! You’ll Love It!” Actually, I take that back. You might really see these things, like impact factors on science journals, or prominent magazine reviews on CDs. If they actually use these in promotion, and not just in house, that would be both totally wild and fodder for like a million more blog posts.

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Discovery -  I Want You Back

Jackson’s Billboard Rankings Over Time is a fantastic bit of datavis work from the New York Times that collects the chart positions of every Michael Jackson single. There is so much to read in this, see how each new single starts just about as the previous one peaks, and look at how with HIStory, the songs start at the highest and then drop. An added bonus is the set of comparisons at the bottom that show how MJ ranks with artists like Mariah Carey, U2, and Boyz II Men.
(via flowingdata)

Jackson’s Billboard Rankings Over Time is a fantastic bit of datavis work from the New York Times that collects the chart positions of every Michael Jackson single. There is so much to read in this, see how each new single starts just about as the previous one peaks, and look at how with HIStory, the songs start at the highest and then drop. An added bonus is the set of comparisons at the bottom that show how MJ ranks with artists like Mariah Carey, U2, and Boyz II Men.

(via flowingdata)

80s Sax Solos

This is just a fantastic collection of saxophone solos from the 80s, rated and categorized with labels like “Whole Notes” and “Mood Breaker.”

(via mrgan)

An interesting post on a New York Times blog about John Roberts’ opinion of Michael Jackson when he worked in the Reagan White House:
I hate to sound like one of Mr. Jackson’s records, constantly repeating the same refrain, but I recommend that we not approve this letter [inviting MJ to the White House]. Sometimes people need to be reminded of the obvious: whatever its status as a cultural phenomenon, the Jackson concert tour is a massive commercial undertaking. The tour will do quite well financially by coming to Washington, and there is no need for the President to applaud such enlightened self-interest. Frankly, I find the obsequious attitude of some members of the White House staff toward Mr. Jackson’s attendants, and the fawning posture they would have the President of the United States adopt, more than a little embarrassing.
Roberts’ position on the repetition of pop music seems to inadvertently channel the European serialist avant-garde’s obsession with non-repetition, summed up by Stockhausen here:
I think that one should try to make music which is a bit more… flexible, so to speak, a bit more irregular. Irregularity is a challenge, you see. How far can we go in making music irregular?
(via NYT)

An interesting post on a New York Times blog about John Roberts’ opinion of Michael Jackson when he worked in the Reagan White House:

I hate to sound like one of Mr. Jackson’s records, constantly repeating the same refrain, but I recommend that we not approve this letter [inviting MJ to the White House]. Sometimes people need to be reminded of the obvious: whatever its status as a cultural phenomenon, the Jackson concert tour is a massive commercial undertaking. The tour will do quite well financially by coming to Washington, and there is no need for the President to applaud such enlightened self-interest. Frankly, I find the obsequious attitude of some members of the White House staff toward Mr. Jackson’s attendants, and the fawning posture they would have the President of the United States adopt, more than a little embarrassing.

Roberts’ position on the repetition of pop music seems to inadvertently channel the European serialist avant-garde’s obsession with non-repetition, summed up by Stockhausen here:

I think that one should try to make music which is a bit more… flexible, so to speak, a bit more irregular. Irregularity is a challenge, you see. How far can we go in making music irregular?

(via NYT)