News:

BEFORE POSTING read our Guidelines.

Main Menu

Why we like the music we do

Started by Wheesht, Thursday 14 July 2016, 07:56

Previous topic - Next topic

Wheesht

While I do not, perhaps, need to know WHY I like Romantic music, I am still intrigued by this new study that suggests that it is due to being culturally conditioned that we like the music we do:
http://news.mit.edu/2016/music-tastes-cultural-not-hardwired-brain-0713

Ilja

Not having read the study, it appears to be rather self-evident. Various other studies have demonstrated how being exposed to music increases one's chance of becoming interested in it oneself - in other words, it is part of your cultural background. Likewise, a preference for a particular kind of music is likely triggered by cultural background. But there can be other factors in play. But in the case of classical music, it may well be social aspiration, for instance. A good example is how classical music has long been part of the "curriculum" of socially upward people in South-East Asia.

matesic

I agree, the findings do seem highly predictable. Experience tells us that our individual taste for dissonance vs consonance or musical "roughness" can change within our lifetime. Over the period of western history during which music has been notated and practices recorded we know that the fashion changed from monophonic to polyphonic with a broadly increasing degree of harmonic complexity, certainly too fast for the "hard wiring" of the brain to evolve by a process of natural selection. Music seems to be to some degree like language in that we have an instinct to adopt whatever styles and idioms we are most exposed to, particularly at a young age.

Double-A

Interesting article.  It is not written by a very competent journalist ("a combination of C and G is often called a perfect fifth").  It is about liking consonance over dissonance.  They tested people unaccustomed to Western music (one can find those in Brazil apparently) to see if they found one more pleasant than the other.  And they did not--Western subjects did.  I.e. the meaning of consonance and dissonance is culturally acquired (and of course almost all music styles popular these days use the distinction in the same way as classical music does.  It is important to state that the test subjects were shown to be able to distinguish between consonance and dissonance even as they failed to notice a difference in their ability to please them.  Apparently consonance/dissonance is hardwired only the meaning of it in today's Western music isn't.  The original paper is in Nature apparently (no precise quote given; that would have been work), so if you have access you can read it there.

Of course practically all Western music is built on the difference between consonance and dissonance--even most of the 20th century stuff outside of the area we are dealing with on this forum.  And the part that has discarded the concept is still dependent on its existence, if only in defiance.  So the study does little to answer the question why somebody likes romantic (or baroque etc.) music.

matesic

As Ilja suggests, there are various psycho-social factors that may influence our preference for one musical type over another. Those that might change our ways of thinking over a period of a few years are precisely the cultural factors that the experiment is intended to isolate, but other short-term influences are left to come out in the statistical wash. After hearing a highly dissonant piece I'd probably "prefer" to listen next to something less ear-stretching. Given a straightforward choice between a concord and a discord, I wouldn't be inclined to express a preference at all!

Delicious Manager

I'm not sure I fit any stereotypes. I enjoy a vast range of music that falls way beyond the remit of this forum. Yes, I enjoy music from the Romantic period, but I also enjoy exploring everything from the Medieval 'Ars Nova' to new music still wet on the page. I also enjoy music of other genres such as rock (especially progressive rock), jazz, pop and film music.
While I realise everyone is different (and halleluia to that!), I am still surprised when I encounter people who steadfastly only listen to one type of music (or period) and refuse to listen to anything new. I love the fact that, even if I live to be 200, there will always be music to explore I have never heard before. What a joy!

ecureuil

Interesting topic, indeed. I would also say that it relates to early exposure. My father listened to classical music, and so do I today. Most people who I know to love classical music have parents with the same music taste.

However, I am also fascinated by the time when the music that I like was created, such as the end of 19th century and early 20th century.

Wheesht

What this study appears to have shown (I do not have access to the full version in Nature) is that, unlike finding the golden section to be naturally 'given', preferring consonance over dissonance is not something that all humans have somehow 'in them' from birth – and that surprised me. I would have expected harmonious music and the golden section in nature, and also in, say, architecture or art,  to be something that all humans inherently like.

matesic

A lot might depend on exactly how the question was posed. I presume the subjects were presented with two 2-note chords sequentially, randomized as to whether the "consonant" chord came first or second. If the question was simply "which do you like best?", my own response might vary according to how much wine I'd drunk the night before! On an average day, however, I'd find it very hard to express a preference - one I might consider more "mellifluous" but the other more "interesting" (something else we haven't been told - just how discordant were the dissonant chords?). On the other hand if the question was "which do you find more pleasant?" I'd probably go for the blander consonance. A crucial thing for me is; might not the Tsimane (who were presumably addressed in their indigenous language), the Spanish-speaking Bolivians and the English-speaking Americans have understood the question slightly differently? Brian Moore whose classic textbook An Introduction to the Psychology of Hearing I have on my shelves seems to think the study was well-designed, so I presume this potential confounding factor was taken care of somehow,

eschiss1

Even in Western music the notions of consonance that we seem convinced are intuitive have fairly obviously changed with time, no? Or would a jazz/showtune minor 9th final cadence, to say nothing of the rest of the piece/song, have fit well in a Dufay chanson?

Sorabji, in an exchange of letters early in his career with an established critic about beautiful melody (the horizontal parallel to the vertical question), used the example of raga (that is, he quoted one, I think, and I think his argument - which he elaborated further- was good.)

sdtom

An interesting article. Since my first work that got my attention was Tchaikovsky's Hamlet Fantasy Overture you know how my roots were formed.

kolaboy

As a youngster I had no substantial exposure to "classical music", apart from cartoons, and films such as Hans Christian Andersen  (my father had a bluegrass band that toured around the southern USA). But for whatever reason I naturally gravitated to it, via albums from second-hand shops - and hearing my uncle play a piece by Brahms on the guitar. A seminal experience.
I love all music, from Machaut to Ligeti, but I do admit an affinity to the creations of the nineteenth century. Every composer discovered is a new planet to explore. Pixis, A. Fesca, and Kalkbrenner have exceeded my expectations. Others have not.
All genres have worth - except for "hip hop", which I consider damaging both to society at large, and to the individual participants. My 'umble opinion :)

semloh

The nature-nurture debate rumbles on. As usual, there is evidence for both 'sides'. For the nurture side, our own experience tells us that our tastes have been significantly affected by our upbringing and cultural context, and this is easy to demonstrate through social research. For the nature side, however, the evidence is 'hidden' and demonstrable only through sophisticated scientific research. There is a body of research which shows that Asian musical taste - and specifically the musical taste of Chinese people - is associated with brain 'wiring' that is different to that of 'Westerners'. It has been researched in depth and used to explain why someone in China appreciates Beijing opera, for example, while Westerners usually find it unpleasant. Apparently it concerns the location and nature of auditory processing centres in the brain. I am not a scientist so can't say how good the science is, and - of course - the usual chicken & egg arguments can be trotted out on behalf of both sides of the debate.

All this seems a long way from UC's remit, however!

TerraEpon

Quote from: matesic on Friday 15 July 2016, 15:51
A lot might depend on exactly how the question was posed. I presume the subjects were presented with two 2-note chords sequentially, randomized as to whether the "consonant" chord came first or second. If the question was simply "which do you like best?", my own response might vary according to how much wine I'd drunk the night before! On an average day, however, I'd find it very hard to express a preference - one I might consider more "mellifluous" but the other more "interesting" (something else we haven't been told - just how discordant were the dissonant chords?). On the other hand if the question was "which do you find more pleasant?" I'd probably go for the blander consonance.

The problem is one of context. A bunch of suspended chords in succession would just sound bizzare, yet a properly placed one gives a very satisfying sound. The dissonant chords at the end of Mozart's 'A Musical Joke' have a hugely different context than someone by Boulez.
Then there's, say, Debussy's use of 9th chords in succession for color, vs using them rarely because of counterpoint.
Etc etc.

lasm2000

I believe the researchers got answers for the wrong question. This kind of test might be useful if we were discussing issues of tempering but overall (IMO) irrelevant for what I'd call music.

Explicitly, depending on how sober I am I might prefer the sound of an F13 chord over G major but that's so beyond the point. It is the combination of harmony, melody, rhythm and tempo what makes or breaks a piece, independently if it is a Western or Chinese one.

Put the same population comparing extracts of the Rach 2 or Beethoven 6th vs the avant garde boys. We can talk after that  :D