The evolution of inharmonicity and noisiness in contemporary popular music
Emmanuel Deruty, David Meredith, Stefan Lattner

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of noise and inharmonicity in popular music since 1961, revealing three distinct phases and relating these trends to changes in music production techniques.
Contribution
It introduces new features to distinguish inharmonicity caused by noise from that caused by partial interactions and contextualizes the evolution of these sound qualities in popular music.
Findings
Inharmonicity increased significantly from 1961 to 1972.
Noise levels rose between 1972 and 1986 and then decreased after 1986.
Recent popular music remains more inharmonic but less noisy than earlier decades.
Abstract
Much of Western classical music relies on instruments based on acoustic resonance, which produce harmonic or quasi-harmonic sounds. In contrast, since the mid-twentieth century, popular music has increasingly been produced in recording studios, where it is not bound by the constraints of harmonic sounds. In this study, we use modified MPEG-7 features to explore and characterise the evolution of noise and inharmonicity in popular music since 1961. We place this evolution in the context of other broad categories of music, including Western classical piano music, orchestral music, and musique concr\`ete. We introduce new features that distinguish between inharmonicity caused by noise and that resulting from interactions between discrete partials. Our analysis reveals that the history of popular music since 1961 can be divided into three phases. From 1961 to 1972, inharmonicity in popular…
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