Quantifying the evolution of harmony and novelty in western classical music
Alfredo Gonz\'alez-Espinoza, Joshua B. Plotkin

TL;DR
This study analyzes 400 years of western classical music to quantify how harmony and novelty evolved, revealing trends in harmonic complexity and innovation over different periods.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel method for representing musical harmony through local key sequences and quantifies their evolution over centuries.
Findings
Decline in harmonic innovation during early classical period
Steep increase in harmonic innovation in late classical period
Method confirms and extends previous musicological observations
Abstract
Music is a complex socio-cultural construct, which fascinates researchers in diverse fields, as well as the general public. Understanding the historical development of music may help us understand perceptual and cognition, while also yielding insight in the processes of cultural transmission, creativity, and innovation. Here, we present a study of musical features related to harmony, and we document how they evolved over 400 years in western classical music. We developed a variant of the center of effect algorithm to call the most likely for a given set of notes, to represent a musical piece as a sequence of local keys computed measure by measure. We develop measures to quantify key uncertainty, and diversity and novelty in key transitions. We provide specific examples to demonstrate the features represented by these concepts, and we argue how they are related to harmonic complexity and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusic and Audio Processing · Neuroscience and Music Perception · Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior
