Continuous self-report engagement responses to the live performance of an atonal, post-serialist solo marimba work

Author:

Broughton Mary C.1,Schubert Emery2,Harvey Dominic G.3,Stevens Catherine J.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Music, The University of Queensland, Australia

2. School of the Arts and Media, University of New South Wales, Australia

3. School of Music, The University of Western Australia, Australia

4. School of Social Sciences and Psychology and The MARCS Institute, Western Sydney University, Australia

Abstract

Repetition of musical sections, tempo, and physical sound intensity associate strongly with listeners’ affective responses to tonal music in controlled laboratory studies. What contribution might repetition, temporal and acoustic variables make to observers’ responses where music lacks a diatonic tonal structure, an obvious beat, and is performed live? The present study investigates relationships between musical repetition (motivic cells and phrases), note density (sequentially occurring), and intensity with observers’ continuous self-report ratings of engagement with an unfamiliar, atonal post-serialist solo marimba work performed live. Following training, 19 audience members continuously self-reported engagement on a bi-polar, one-dimensional scale using the portable Audience Response Facility. Note density and intensity contributed significantly (or explained variance) to observer engagement with the performance. Contrary to expectation, the repetition variables did not contribute significantly. Controlling serial correlation using a new modelling approach based on Box–Jenkins ARIMA transfer modelling, density emerged as the prime contributor to observer engagement. A single performance appeared to provide observers with insufficient exposure to understand and respond to the structure of atonal music. Note density potentially enabled observers to segment the musical surface and develop some structural understanding, possibly underpinned by stimulus-driven entrainment processes shaping attentional behaviour and musical expectations.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychology (miscellaneous),Music

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2. A model of time-varying music engagement;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-12-18

3. Unifying concert research and science outreach;Musicae Scientiae;2023-06-30

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