The perception of expressive timing in music

SummaryThis paper is concerned with the perception of small-scale timing changes in musical sequences. The control and expressive function of these have been studied quite extensively from a production perspective, but not much is known about listeners' ability to detect them. A pilot study and two experiments are reported which investigate the detectability of different amounts of timing change in different sequential positions, different pitch contexts, and against the background of both metronomic and expressive comparisons. The results show that listeners are able to perceive as little as 20 ms lengthening in the context of notes lasting between 100 and 400 ms, and that this threshold appears not to be a function of base duration in this range. Sequential position and pitch structure influence the detectability of timing changes to a limited extent, for which some possible explanations are offered. A case is made for regarding timing in music as both a medium to convey structure and an object in its own right, suggesting that it may be perceptually organized in two different ways — as the consequence of a structural interpretation and as a directly registered quantity.

[1]  L. H. Shaffer,et al.  Timing in Solo and Duet Piano Performances , 1984 .

[2]  J. Sloboda The Communication of Musical Metre in Piano Performance , 1983 .

[3]  Paul Fraisse,et al.  Les structures rythmiques , 1960 .

[4]  Shaffer Lh Rhythm and timing in skill. , 1982 .

[5]  Alfred B. Kristofferson,et al.  Psychophysical theories of duration discrimination , 1974 .

[6]  W. R. Garner The Processing of Information and Structure , 1974 .

[7]  N. Todd A Model of Expressive Timing in Tonal Music , 1985 .

[8]  L. H. Shaffer,et al.  Metre and rhythm in piano playing , 1985, Cognition.

[9]  R. M. Warren,et al.  Auditory Sequence: Confusion of Patterns Other Than Speech or Music , 1969, Science.

[10]  Eric Clarke,et al.  Some Aspects of Rhythm and Expression in Performances of Erik Satie's "Gnossienne No. 5" , 1985 .

[11]  Eric Clarke,et al.  The Imitation of Perceived Rubato: A Preliminary Study , 1987 .

[12]  H. C. Longuet-Higgins,et al.  Perception of melodies , 1976, Nature.

[13]  Eric Clarke,et al.  Timing in the performance of Erik Satie's ‘Vexations’ ☆ , 1982 .

[14]  L. H. Shaffer,et al.  Performances of Chopin, Bach, and Bartok: Studies in motor programming , 1981, Cognitive Psychology.

[15]  Lee Dn,et al.  The optic flow field: the foundation of vision. , 1980 .

[16]  A. Kristofferson,et al.  Response delays and the timing of discrete motor responses , 1973 .

[17]  Eric Clarke,et al.  Levels of structure in the organization of musical time , 1987 .

[18]  Grosvenor W. Cooper,et al.  The Rhythmic Structure of Music , 1971 .

[19]  R. Jackendoff,et al.  A Generative Theory of Tonal Music , 1985 .

[20]  D J Povel,et al.  Internal representation of simple temporal patterns. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[21]  John A. Sloboda,et al.  Expressive skill in two pianists: metrical communication in real and simulated performances , 1985 .

[22]  L. V. Noorden Temporal coherence in the perception of tone sequences , 1975 .

[23]  Gary E. Wittlich,et al.  The Stratification of Musical Rhythm , 1976 .