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Hit songs rely on increasing “harmonic surprise” to hook listeners, study finds

arstechnica.com

43 points by anandabits 4 years ago · 11 comments

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Slow_Hand 4 years ago

As a lifelong musician this seems so plainly obvious to me that it barely seems like news. I suppose a formal study simply confirms it for everyone else. Perhaps I'm missing something.

Popular music ebbs and flows in it's harmonic complexity over decades. Certainly in the last century of popular music. One of James Brown's innovations in the 60s was reducing jazz and RnB music down to one chord for an entire song. On the other hand, 70's songwriting was harmonically rich, with lots of adventurous modulations, modal interchange, and extended chords (7ths, 9ths, etc).

We're now coming out of a two decade run where hip hop has been the dominant popular music. A form which, generally speaking, tends to be harmonically "flat" (ala James Brown) and simple in form. For songwriters who are looking to differentiate themselves from their peers a move back into harmonic complexity is a worthy move and low hanging fruit in a musical era where few have been making use of it.

Compelling music has always been, in some sense, about setting up expectations and then subverting them. The art is in the balancing of steady patterns and novel events.

  • wildrhythms 4 years ago

    I'm still a little confused what the "harmonic surprise" is... is it a genre shift within a piece of music? Is it related to chord progression? Is it a key change?

    The example in the article seems to hint at "harmonic surprise" referring to a simple genre shift:

    >With its stark, sudden shifts between choral melodies in major chords and menacing percussive elements drawn from the trap subgenre, the song constantly defies the listener's expectations throughout. That's why "This is America" also tops the list of pop songs rich in so-called "harmonic surprise," or points when the music deviates from listener expectations.

  • 8bitsrule 4 years ago

    Righto. A key change is pretty easy when you've got MIDI driving samples. Too much bother, I guess.

    I've also noticed that most pop music today (not to blame any genre) is rhythmically flat. Not many examples of 'Take 5'. Same drum samples used throughout the whole of 5-minute pieces. Lots of studio processing to make the result seem more like music. Which it isn't.

    It isn't the machines' fault; it's the 'producers' manning them. Drop a hit now'n then. Throw in an extra one. Too busy cranking out the candy? I just call it: lazy, lazy, lazy. And very, very boring.

AareyBaba 4 years ago

Rick Beato's "The Most COMPLEX Pop Song of All Time" is worth listening to https://youtu.be/ZnRxTW8GxT8?t=58

  • nefitty 4 years ago

    I just discovered his videos yesterday. His series “What Makes This Song Great” is helping me better organize my thoughts around rock music production.

russellbeattie 4 years ago

So will we return to the multi-part, operatic mix-n-match pieces like in 60s and 70s pop rock? Songs like Day in the Life, Mr. Blue Sky, Good Vibrations, or pretty much every hit by Paul McCartney? I mean "Band on the Run" is like 4 or 5 songs in 3 minutes.

afavour 4 years ago

A fascinating read. I remember many years ago listening to Take Me Out by Franz Ferdinand for the first time and being absolutely taken aback by the total shift it took a minute or so into the song. I wonder if that was one of those moments the article describes.

https://youtu.be/Ijk4j-r7qPA

  • Slow_Hand 4 years ago

    It certainly was for me. I know exactly where I was when I heard that song for the first time. For me the biggest point of interest is the radical tempo change. I loooove that kind of stuff.

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