6533b837fe1ef96bd12a325d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
On listening to atonal variants of two Piano Sonatas by Beethoven
Joanna Kantor-martynuskaEmmanuel BigandPhilippe LalitteCharles Delbéésubject
[ SHS.MUSIQ ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsmedia_common.quotation_subjectatonal variantsMusical050105 experimental psychology060404 musicArousalRhythmPerceptionSimilarity (psychology)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesActive listeningBeethovenmedia_commonCommunication[SHS.MUSIQ]Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsbusiness.industry05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsPiano sonata[SHS.MUSIQ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsFeelingtwo Piano sonatasbusinessPsychology0604 artsMusicCognitive psychologydescription
International audience; We investigated the contribution of tonal relationships to the perception of musical ideas and to the feelings of "arousal." Two excerpts of piano sonatas by Beethoven and two atonal variants were used as experimental stimuli. This manipulation destroyed the tonal relationships but preserved both the local and global temporal organization (rhythm and formal). Listeners were asked to indicate the onset of musical ideas, to estimate the arousing properties of the music in a continuous response task, and to rate the similarity of the pieces. A drastic change in the pitch structure strongly affected judgments of similarity. However, it had no effect on the segmentation of musical ideas, nor on the response of arousal. This finding emphasizes the importance of local and global levels of temporal structures on perceptual and emotional judgments, at the cost of the influence of tonal relationships.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-02-01 |