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Song Variance Comparison


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I. Introduction

Over the past decade or so, the concept of melody seems to have changed from what it was for Rock or Big Band melodies. There are songs being written with the traditional concept of melody and I have provided some examples below. However, the most prominent interpretation of melody is what Im calling contemporary melody.

 

In the past melodies were an important component of the marketability of the song. However, today melodies seem more like an afterthought. As I will demonstrate in this paper, it is possible to statistically measure the difference in variation between traditional and contemporary melodies. Moreover, traditional melodies exhibit a larger range of pitch whereas the contemporary melodies are confined to a narrow set of notes.

 

II. Traditional Melody

 

The notes in a good melody have a direction up or down. Overall the notes may have many up and down movements. However, they dont just randomly jump around or on the other hand remain in a very narrow range. Here are a set of guidelines for a traditional melody:

 

A good melody has movement.

A good melody is familiar yet unexpected.

A good melody has a center.

A good melody repeats itself.

A good melody has form.

A good melody creates and resolves tension.

A good melody has repetition and structure.

Finally, the best melodies combine both the familiar with elements of surprise.

 

This melody written for Lady Gaga is a good example of a traditional melody. As you can see in the first verse the melody builds on a theme. This excerpt from the lyrics expresses the theme:

 

The melody for the verses reinforces the theme in the lyrics.

 

Bad Romance Sheet Music

 

Contemporary melody by and large ignores the guidelines that I described for traditional melody. Instead contemporary melodies move up and down by every single note for much of the song. Every so often the melody will include a high note to emphasize a particular point. These melodies are not very much different than rap. A good example of this type of melody is Love You Like a Love Song performed by Selena Gomez. This song is a different type of love song, as you can see from this sample of the lyrics of the first verse:

 

It's been said and done

Every beautiful thought's been already sung

And I guess right now here's another one

So your melody will play on and on, with the best of 'em

You are beautiful, like a dream come alive, incredible

A sinful, miracle, lyrical

You've saved my life again

 

The difference is that whereas the melody for Bad Romance reinforces the lyrics, the melody for Love You Like a Love Song is fairly monotonic.

 

Love You Like a Love Song

 

IV. Variance Methodology

If what I have just described about the difference between contemporary melodies and traditional melodies is true, the variation of the pitch in contemporary melodies will be significantly less than the variation of traditional melodies. There is a way to demonstrate this statistically. We can compute what is known as the coefficient of variation. This in turn requires us to compute the average pitch and the pitch variance. While these terms are meaningless musically they do provide a useful way to demonstrate my hypothesis. The average pitch is the sum of all the note pitches divided by the number of notes. To calculate the variance, subtract the average pitch from each individual pitch and square the result. The coefficient of variation is the variance divided by the average pitch. Its not correct simply to use the variance because, for example, the variance of the same song at a higher pitch would be higher than the variance of the lower pitch. However, the coefficient of variation would be the same.

 

V. Results

Admittedly this is a small sample. As you can see from Figure 1, the average coefficient of variation for traditional songs is significantly higher than the coefficient of variation for contemporary songs.

 

Variance Comparison Summary

 

The statistics of each of these songs reflects the principles that I have discussed for each melody. Take a look at these histograms for each song. The melody for Bad Romance is primarily distributed over nine different notes which account for 99% of the notes in this song. The range of these notes and is 12 semitones. On the other hand in the melody for Love You Like a Love song a single note is used 43% of the time and only four notes account for 86% of the melody. The range of these notes is only five semitones.

 

Bad Romance Variance Analysis

 

Love You Like a Love Song

 

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Thanks for sharing. This is relevant to a joke I objected to over on Keyboard Corner, about young songwriters not knowing how to write interesting songs.

 

On the rare occasions I listen to top 40, I'm certainly struck by this. I think the hip-hop influence mentioned is an important point -- when rhythm is the primary structural and motivic feature of a song, traditional melody isn't necessary for a hit (or, to use Mixerman's parlance, "to achieve a reaction"). It's especially impactful when it draws attention to the lyrics, though in top 40 that tends to not be key.

 

I usually feel that an interesting melody, underpinned by a harmonic structure that evokes an emotional reaction of some kind, is necessary for what I'd call a good song. But there are plenty of huge hits from the last century (probably more from the last 30 years) whose defining characteristics are a groove and a chorus melody. We're running into that changing definition in copyright suits, too -- the Robin Thicke/Marvin Gaye case from a few years ago comes to mind.

 

I had a professor once call this my "Western addiction to harmony." Not sure I agree with his stance, but it made me think about what I consider "good" and "bad" in music. If music is just organized sound, it's just a matter of preference. But I do like to hear something that surprises me every now and then.

Samuel B. Lupowitz

Musician. Songwriter. Food Enthusiast. Bad Pun Aficionado.

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