Decoding the Algorithm for Pop Music 353
fb4f writes "Over at Modplug, they have an article describing a mathematical algorithm to predict if a given song will become a hit or not. Paraphrasing the article, a Spanish company called Polyphonic HMI has made a business out of analyzing song submissions and predicting their "hitability". Here's their description of the algorithm and here's their FAQ. They claim to have predicted the commercial success of Norah Jones through this method. Here's my question (which is not fully answered in their FAQ): if they (music company executives) are currently using the algorithm to screen submissions for their "hitability", can we (people who listen to music) use the same algorithm to reject recycled tunes and encourage originality? I for one, still like the fresh talent and community feel of the tracking scene."
Karma Hit (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Karma Hit (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Karma Hit (Score:3, Interesting)
Someone should make a program that when you ask it to, downloads a story (showing all comments and with the number per page at max so it doesn't have to spider and piss off slashcode) and splits the comments into -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 "buckets" and creates a spam filter. Then, you can apply it to other stories. Sorting by topic would be good, since saying Windows in an Apple story has a good chance of being a flame (or maybe a comparison), but saying it in a story about Longhorn [sucks] probably is less im
Re:Karma Hit (Score:2)
Re:Karma Hit (Score:5, Funny)
It's tough to come up with an algorythm for slasdot moderations. SCO bashing will not guarrentee anything. In fact, I used some software similar to that mentioned in this article, and determined that this comment will be modded +5.
SCO RULES!
Bill Gates is your friend.
I enjoy RFID!
I can't get enough of that Jon Katz!
Linux is for little girls.
Look at my newest casemod! I put a flashlight in there!
Hilary Rosen is a super-fox!
I peed in your coffee.
The Simpsons/Matrix/Starwars/LordoftheRings totally sucks.
DRM is the answer to everything!
I just patented food!
These comments alone would not gain a +5, however, the self-referencial nature of this comment will.
Granted, this software is still in beta.
Re:Karma Hit (Score:2, Funny)
Was the spelling mistake part of the self-referential nature of the comment?
Re:Karma Hit (Score:2)
You have me crying!
--Joey
My Pop Music Algorithm (Score:5, Funny)
If Singer.Voice.isScreaming() then mod.singer.+1punkfav
If Singer.Gender.isMale() then mod.singer.+1prepubescentgirls
If Singer.Label.isRIAA() then mod.singer.+1popular
If Singer.Style.isOriginal() then mod.singer.-1original
Mod parent up (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Mod parent up (Score:5, Insightful)
A quote: (Score:2, Funny)
"Nu-metal is great for 12-year-olds who want to be individual together."
Re:My Pop Music Algorithm (Score:2)
If Act.isFemale()
then Act.showBellyButton()
Act.wearSkimpyClothes()
Act.kissOtherFemales()
else
Act.donotShave()
Act.dateModel()
Act.activateJerkMode()
Act.breakupWithModel()
End If
Marketing.overHype(Act)
what came first? (Score:5, Insightful)
This company's stuff doesn't do much good when society is bombarded by what the industry wants us to hear.
It becomes a hit because we don't get much of a choice. ClearChannel plays no variety, the non conclomorate channels don't play variety but instead endlessly repeat that they are not owned by ClearChannel and Infinity...
The only way hits can be decided is through freedom of music.
Support those artists that support the free distribution, copying, and playing of their music. Start your searchs at Sharing the Groove [sharingthegroove.com] and FuthurNET [furthurnet.com]
Endless Repetition (Score:4, Insightful)
The software thats been cooked basically gives record execs another means of increasing their hit:miss ratio.
So think of it this way, the RIAA claims that they charge high prices to make up for all the flops. They now have a new means to weed out the money wasters. Profit goes up, prices go down... right?
Hmmm... (Score:2)
I wonder if they've tested it against *other* music than crap as well...
If Autechre or Pan Sonic came out with extra hitability I guess there'd be a quite few people looking shocked and/or running for the hills... *eg*
np: Autechre - Gantz Graf (Gantz Graf EP)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
They claim that the algorithm is impartial, but we'll have to wait and see if it really is.
Not new (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not new (Score:2, Funny)
So - looks like it's been working for quite a while then.
Dupe. (Score:5, Informative)
Well, I don't know how to tell what songs will be popular. But, obviously, this topic is popular [slashdot.org].
Re:Dupe. (Score:2)
Ah, I was planning to suggest a filtering program based on similar idea for Slashdot. Then I saw your post and, heck, they haven't even figured out how to filter dupes, sigh!
Sounds like the formula for movie success (Score:5, Funny)
30% Comedy
30% Romance
0% Madonna
( with credit to Jay Leno )
Star success? (Score:3, Funny)
Am I the only one wondering who the hell Norah Jones is?
You damn kids and your pop music. I think I'm going to have to dodder out on the porch and yell at the neighbors' kids for playing on my lawn.
--saint
Re:Star success? (Score:2)
Re:Star success? (Score:2)
Think Billie Holliday with a smoother voice recorded on modern equipment. Think soft jazz/blues.
I bought the CD for my wife and was surprised that it was very listenable for me, a non-jazz type.Re:Star success? (Score:5, Informative)
(And if you don't know THAT name, he was the guy who introduced The Beatles to the sitar.)
Re:Star success? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Star success? (Score:2)
Now i'll bitchslap you if you don't know who YOKO is, All hail YOKO...
Re:Star success? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Star success? (Score:3, Funny)
-
WARNING - CHILD PORN (Score:2, Informative)
Moderators???
And my question ... (Score:5, Interesting)
And here's my question: can we use this algorithm to create the hit, instead of determining wether or not it's gonna be a hit?
Re:And my question ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:And my question ... (Score:2)
John Sauter (J_Sauter@Empire.Net)
Re:And my question ... (Score:4, Funny)
Can't be done (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, predicting what will be popular might be very easy.
Next big pop hit = whatever the record companies tell them it will be.
Witness the last American Idol. Who did the sheeple choose? The large black guy, Rueben. Months later, who do you hear the most about? The Howdy Doody lookalike who came in second place, Clay.
"you vill like vhat ve vant, not what you vant!"
Re:Can't be done (Score:2)
I didn't know there were any higher order functions
Re:Can't be done (Score:2)
Clay was "good". I don't care for that artsy singing that he was doing but he was far better than Rueben.
Responding to the AC that posted here as well. Racism? What about equal hatred? Clay as obviously feminine. People in this society do not like those that are feminine anymore than they like those of color. Do you think it made
Re:And what about hip-hop/rap? (Score:5, Insightful)
As a younger listener, I was well aware of rap music, but it sort of cornered its own market and stayed there. I don't think anyone was prepared for, or could of predicted the massive influx of rap/hip-hop into the mainstream. Personally, it's not my bag of tea (little music is these days). And personally, I don't see what's so prolific about it, other than the fact that a good portion of it has a *very* raw, rebellious overtone that is, for whatever reason, favored by youth. But it's there, it has a huge market, and I find it interesting, if for no other reason than to admire the degree of influence it has had.
Given this, I'm not sure there is any algorithm that can predict what people will decide they like at any given point, as there are so many dynamics at work. As others have pointed out, there is definitely the chance that our music-buying preferences are being manipulated by those at the top telling us what we like. But there are also others - the infamous "what are my friends listening to" I-gotta-be-like-everyone-else mentality. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention another significant consideration, at least with respect to the most of the popular artists: Is there any money in it?
Re:Can't be done (Score:2)
Indeed. While scans often show brainwave activity at or near zero, these beings still manage to operate on some preprogrammed level.
Re:Can't be done (Score:2)
Re:Can't be done (Score:3, Insightful)
I am not sure I can totally disagree with that. However, it is not because of racism, I think it is more because black people tend to gather around black culture. I think many blacks would fear being labeled as an oreo or some other such divisive label if they, for example, embraced punk rock.
Just as an interesting view (not intended to b
Classical (Score:4, Interesting)
IIRC, this was first tested on random samplings of classical music. Beethoven and Mozart scored significantly better that others.
Re:Classical (Score:2, Offtopic)
Some people prefer music from the romantic period, some like more modern fare, and some like myself prefer baroq
Re:Classical (Score:2)
Reliability (quote from link) ? (Score:4, Insightful)
It sound like "we found some correlation, but there is data outside the correlation, and sometimes downright anti-correlation between reality and prediction". I think without looking at the data and the real corelation coeficient between "predicting it will be a hit" and "it was a hit" it is difficult to say anything. And even then, correlation between data does not mean there is causal relation, although *pleasing* to the ear is certainly why we hear at music. I think this kleave other factor out. For example the signification of the lyrics. You ear Mozart uniquely for the pure sound pleasantness, but you do not ear some of the rock/pop for its sound only (try it, many of the greatest hit sound "bland" without their lyric).
Plus even if they try to "reassure" customer in their FAQ, if you comapre things to the past and try to reproduce what has the best functionned in the past, then you will never innovate. Which is IMO the biggest problem now (and it feels that new bands/singer are solely choosen on their look, given prefabricated lyric and tune, and marketed as prima dona, instead of having bands/singer raise on their own by the sheer beauty of their music).
Re:Reliability (quote from link) ? (Score:2)
On the correlation argument, if they use factors known prior to the song being a hit to predict that it will be, it's not correlation they are looking at but some sort of R^2 - which measures predictability (this is not about causality - they want to PREDICT, not find out _why_). Think of it this way, you can predict in advance that the sun will go d
Not a good example. (Score:2)
Re:Reliability (quote from link) ? (Score:2)
Similarly, I'm sure with this technology certain patterns are definitely there and can be latched onto, but that doesn't mean y
People don't want origionality (Score:3, Insightful)
Occassionally there is a blip and people get excited about something. But mostly they are content to wander through life with a catchy tune in their hollow little heads.
Circular logic (Score:3, Insightful)
The algorithm uses the top 30 songs of the last five years as its base of comparison. It then analyzes thousands of songs and determines which ones are most likely to be hits, and those that score best are selectively fed into the market. These songs by necessity become the next set of top 30 hits, and are again used as the algorithm's base of comparison.
So basically, the basis of the system is "these songs will be hits because I say they'll be hits, and I say they'll be hits because they sound like songs that I said would be hits." Isn't this a really, really bad (read: dangerous) case of circular logic?
This is ass-covering for executives.... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Well, it bombed in the market, but the software algorithm said it had a chance. I did what the software said was right."
It's your run-of-the-mill corporate bullshit. No creativity, and no real courage to try something different and take a risk.
How do you think we got Milli Vanilli?
The music industry as it is, is little more than a middle-man. Cut them out of the picture, and the consumers benefit, and the REAL artists do too!
Oh come on, this is easy (Score:3, Insightful)
Popularity = k . MarketingBudget
The more they hype it, the more the buying public (increasingly younger teenagers, I wait for the day they get to "pocket-money" kids who simply can't afford it - the industry will implode) will cough up....
Simon the cynic.
Recipe music (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, so far, so good; it sounds like they're saying "good music is good music, and here's a tool for telling whether something is good or not." I'm still skeptical at this point, but it's certainly an interesting idea, and one worthy of study.
But then they completely lose me with this one:
IOW, our algorithm says music is good if it sounds like everything else people think is good right now, and if it's different from current Top 40, it's crap.
They make a high-flown reference to the 36 Plots and other serious attempts at artistic analysis, but that's not what they're actually doing. I do believe that good music is good music, good stories are good stories, etc. I can at least consider seriously the hypothesis that all good art has certain qualities in common, and that by analyzing those qualities we can evaluate a new work's chance of lasting success. But the idea that musicians (or writers, or whatever) can keep pumping out stuff exactly like What's Hot Now and be guaranteed a blockbuster is just stupid.
Re:Recipe music (Score:3, Insightful)
If 'what's hot now' stops selling in large numbers then the algorithm will be adjusted - presumably they keep feeding in the latest songs and their sales volumes.
Re:Recipe music (Score:2)
Like I said, I can believe that there's a common thread running through all great music. I just can't believe that the majority of currently successful pop music (not a slam on current pop music pe
Re:Recipe music (Score:2)
I find myself liking music from real musicians, people like Celine Dion and Faith Hill. I think pop music is utter crap. Hopefully this algorithm won't be used to stifle the new, fresh, original stuff and pump out the same old crap just to try to make short-term money.
Re:Recipe music (Score:3, Interesting)
I read that more as "our algorithm doesn't work most of the time, but if we get to rig the test, er, um, choose the musical style we want to deal with, we do ok."
If they could identify a set of interesting weights (or whatever) that their stuff comes up with, and track those weights over time, then if the time series are anywhere near smooth they co
The Manual (Score:4, Interesting)
The Manual [instrumentality.com] - how to have a number one - the easy way.
Written by the Timelords (the KLF)
(i know, this is a bit offtopic, but hey!, why not?)
tracking scene? (Score:2)
"I for one, still like the fresh talent and community feel of the tracking scene."
And I, for one, long for the return to the simplicity and elegance of railway travel.
~jeff
it's the other way around (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway the point is that the guy pointed out that most pop tunes were rehashes of older pop hits. Maybe you create a different style with different instruments or beat, but the underlying melody is the same. He then showed some examples, in how some modern R&B titles were lifted off some older Rock titles. It's not that hard to believe though, look at how Puff Daddy makes a living out of talking fast over music of old hits.
So in short, one way to predict if a music will be a hit is by creating a database of previous hits and test the correlation...
[and then of course, there's those who say that Classical music tried every combination possible, so nothing can be new afterwards - but that's maybe a little extreme].
Re:it's the other way around (Score:2)
(PS. I'm a big fan of Mike Batt.
Copyright (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyway the point is that the guy pointed out that most pop tunes were rehashes of older pop hits.
And this is how the situation perpetuates itself. If somebody new to the scene comes in and tries to write an original song, he will undoubtedly get bit by an earworm of a song that was popular decades ago but is still copyrighted. Then the older song's publisher will sue the rookie.
Yes, it could happen, and yes, it did happen: Bright Tunes Music v. Harrisongs Music [columbia.edu].
and then of course, there's those
Re:it's the other way around (Score:4, Insightful)
Furthermore, I think that the style, and, especially, working out how the style and the underlying melody can be resolved, is as significant an application of artistic talent as writing the melody in the first place. It's like translating poetry; it's easy to do a direct translation, but making it actually work as poetry in the target language is at least as hard as writing the original (since you're constrained not only to write a good poem, but you have to also make it match another work in all of the ways that are important, while using entirely different grammer and vocabulary).
In short, even if classical music tried every melody, the existance of new styles and instrumentations means that there will be new complete works.
Re:it's the other way around (Score:2)
I fully agree. But if innovation is on style and instrumentation, and those remain constant across songs of a same "pop style", then they're not innovative at all. Maybe the first one of them, but that's it. As for the actual content of the lyrics, most pop songs seem to fall into one of these patterns:
- "boy/girl loves girl/boy"
- "angry against the 'system'"
- ego trips
Re:it's the other way around (Score:2)
This song is just six words long
This song is just six words long
This song is just six words long
This song is just six words long
Couldn't think of any lyrics
No I never wrote the lyrics
So I'll just sing any old lyric
s That come to mind, child
Snake oil? (Score:5, Interesting)
"This software will compare the song to a database that contains the "top-30" hit songs of the past five years in order to search for mathematical similarities. The algorithm then assigns each song a score between one and 10. Any song rated more than seven is likely to become a hit."
Now think about this.. use musical eras like the 80's and early 90's as an example because it's reasonably safe to assume this technology didn't exist at that point.
Look at the charts in 5 year chunks, it all sounds the same. In the 80's, everyone either used a synthesizer or had a raging, face-melting solo at some point in the song. Or the early 90's, "grunge" was being pounded into our head incessantly.
It was like that because it was popular. Band X makes it big, and suddenly Bands X1 through X255 appear on the charts mimicing this sound. This seems to happen in, amazingly enough, cycles of 5 years.
Seems to me this software does nothing to show the "hitability" of a song, but rather telling you whether or not it sounds just like what's currently popular, and has been for the past couple years.
Seems about as magical to me as as an algrorythm claiming it can detect boys that like looking at porn.
Um... (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing new here (Score:2)
Using Algorithms for Music (Score:2)
I really hate to even remotely sound like I'm going to defend the music industry, but: Why don't you decide for YOURSELF without any help from your peers or technology as to the merits of the music? All music is just nois
Clear Channel automotive monopoly (Score:2)
no one is forcing you to listen to a "Clear Channel" type station in the first place.
How about every employer in fields where employees do not telecommute? If all the music stations that one's car can receive are owned by Clear Channel or another nationwide radio giant, what other choice is there to listen to while driving to and from work?
Re:Clear Channel automotive monopoly (Score:2)
Now there is the uncomfortable environment that I didn't anticipate from my original post: Canned music in department/grocery stores. The employees in those environments have no choice but to listen to music played overhead. On t
Re:Clear Channel automotive monopoly (Score:2)
My old car had a Radio/Cassette deck, into which I had plugged one of those CD-Tape adapters. After a few years, I could no longer eject the adapter and was (gasp) forced to only listen to CDs.
In the past 5 years, the only radio station that I've listened to is NPR. My new car has an MP3 CD player, so with the 10 CDs stuck in the visor and the other 20 in a carrying case, I have around 300 hours of music to listen to.
There may only be a limited number of "good plots" (Score:2)
It may simpl
Algorithm and blues (Score:5, Insightful)
Those of us who live by algorithms should recognize that there are some sorts of human creative intelligence which cannot be captured by formulas, or replaced by them (see physicist Roger Penrose's books on this). If something like this firm's algorithm is really accurate, it should be possible to evolve a neural net to compose pop songs simply by having the success of its efforts defined by feedback from the formula. Would you find living in that world inspiring?
Much of the best of 60s pop music was haunted and quirky. That's what happens when the creative is in the lead, rather than the formulaic. Compare the Elizabethan stage. Human expression triumphs when the formulas, while still there for reference, cease to have a stranglehold over production.
Re:Algorithm and blues (Score:2)
Certainly not inspiring, but I don't see why it should be any worse than today's world of N'Sync and comparable test tube bands.
What will be played to us in the nursing home? (Score:2)
Is it safe to say that Lawrence Welk was also a 60's phenomenon? I have a mom in a nursing home, and the PBS showing of Lawrence Welk reruns is the Saturday evening "activity" at that and many other nursing homes. One of my hidden pleasures is actually Lawrence Welk because they did a lot of cool swing-pop.
Heck, what made Lawrence Welk, well Lawrence Welk, was that he was doing swing-pop long after
So it's true... (Score:2)
I've long thought that the reason that I disliked most of what passed as ``popular'' music was that it was too formulaic. I used to think it was just ``herd think'' by music industry executives but now it turns out that they've just been following a recipe and these guys just reverse engineered it.
How long before I can get a box that I can connect to the stereo that displays the level of adherence to The Formula so I can get a visual indication of why I dislike a certain song and can change the station.
Old and New Alike (Score:2)
Indeed, original music isn't necessarily good. But what was interesting was that in the report, they talked about all the different genres, and even older music, like classical, held true to grouping.
And even music in the same category, like two Pop songs, weren't always in the same grouping.
On another not
Don't leave, just stay, I'll go! (Score:2)
Re:Don't leave, just stay, I'll go! (Score:2)
1. Could you please give an example?:)
Re:Don't leave, just stay, I'll go! (Score:2)
Optimal mathematical patterns (Score:4, Insightful)
So let me get this straight: if a song sounds like a current hit song, it may well be a hit song?
Any this is useful how?
They say they match parameters such as:
Even then, they add this huge disclaimer:
1. The song must be good from an A&R perspective. That is it must sound like a hit song to human ears.
2. It must have optimal mathematical patterns. (that's where this service comes in).
3. It must be promoted well and with an appropriate artist.
Feh. Nothing to see here. If you're interested in real algorithmic analysis, check out David Cope [ucsc.edu].
Rebel to Rebel? (Score:3, Insightful)
It Takes Math?!? (Score:2)
Verse 1
Verse 2
Chours
Solo
Verse 3
Chorus
(Repeat chorus while fading out)
There. A top ten song...
Utter garbage. (Score:4, Insightful)
That's true in that music has probably had percussion since the start, other then that, total rubbish.
What about music from other cultures? Totally different scales, numbers of notes, structure, the works. You gonna tell a billion Indian's their taste in music is mathematically wrong?
Music is almost 100% relative. It's about painting a psycho acoustic picture inside the listener. Why do certain sounds feel aggressive, well others are soulful? It's 99% arbitrary.
Goodness, in a pop sense, is a matter of painting a picture a whole bunch of people perceive in a similar way. It's a function of civilization, just like any art.
The very thought that you can mathematically write pop songs. People have been trying for awhile. Even if you get an algorithm for a perfect pop song, everyone would get sick of that style and pop would reinvent itself. It's what happens. Hair metal gives way to Grunge. Grunge gives way to Big Beat, Big Beat gives way to nu metal, nu metal gives way to retro-punk. Hip hop does it all within one genera. Street goes to bling, bling goes to conscience, conscience goes to freestyle street and now we got Outkast doing some sort of 70s funk thing doing triple platinum.
The trick isn't writing songs, that's easy, the trick is writing the songs that work nearly universally.
Ask anybody who does it for a living.
bOObs ! (Score:2)
Wesley Willis (Score:2)
After listening to a lot of Wesley Willis mp3s, the Beach Boys start to sound very formulatic, complete with the exact same pattern: Verse Verse Solo Verse. Only without the chorus consisting of repeating the title 4 times.
Rivers Cuomo already did it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Appears to work (or at least teach him a pattern)--Weezer's damn catchy.
balancing on a rope (Score:3, Informative)
It turns out that there just aren't that many ways that you can assemble the harmonic building blocks of music (in mere structural terms, that is -- the treatment of the structure is where the real variety goes). What I mean is that we have to live with the cycle of fifths, and the strong progressions that happen between chords rooted on tones that are adjacent in the cycle. Why? Because the root tones of the chords in your "key" all happen to be adjacent along the circle, as are the remaining 5 out of 12 tones that are not in your key.
The I (roman numeral one) chord has the IV chord on one side, and the V chord on the other. There's your basis for rock and blues.
On the far side of the V chord (from the I) lies the ii chord (lower-case roman numeral, denoting a minor chord). There lies your basis for jazz: the ii V I progression.
And the longest, strongest progression that contains all of the diatonic chords: IV vii iii vi ii V I (473-6251). They're all in a line along the cycle of fiths, except between the 4 and the 7, where we hide the "seam" left by restricting ourselves to the diatonic tones.
And why restrict ourselves to the diatonic system? Well, it turns out that the diatonic major scale is unique in that it can be constructed by a simple algorithm, starting with one of the 12 tones (adding to the scale as you go) and proceeding up a perfect fifth (modulo 12) until there are no more gaps left that are larger than a "whole step" (two half-steps). This is a very special scale and it amazes me how early in human history it was discovered. It's no wonder the monks thought it was god's own scale.
And don't even get me started on the golden ratio as it appears in musical architecture.
Of course music gets recycled. Deal with it.
by observation change follows... (Score:2)
By observing the object, the object changes.
One example of this is the trillion dollar bet [pbs.org] where the only way to protect against such misuse or stockmarket card counting, is to make it public where everyone uses it.
Something about making something untrue by making it public knowledge.
If such a algorythim is possible then it can be programmed into a music program to generate intellectual property...So to own all hits before they are.
Maybe we just need plugs in the
I'd hit it... (Score:2)
DaVinci's Notebook - Title of the Song (Score:5, Funny)
Declaration of my feelings for you
Elaboration on those feelings
Description of how long these feelings have existed
Belief that no one else could feel the same as I
Reminiscence of the pleasant times we've shared
And our relationship's perfection
Recounting of the steps that lead to our love's dissillusion
Mostly involving my unfaithfulness and lies
Penitent admission of wrongdoing
Discovery of the depth of my affection
Regret over the lateness of my epiphany
CHORUS:
Title of the song
Naive expression of love
Reluctance to accept that you are gone
Request to turn back time
And rectify my wrongs
Repetition of the title of the song
Enumeration of my various transgressive actions
Of insufficient motivation
Realization that these actions led to your departure
And my resultant lack of sleep and appetite
Renunciation of my past insensitive behavior
Promise of my reformation
Reassurance that you still are foremeost in my thoughts, now,
Need for instructions how to gain your trust again
Request for reconciliation
Listing of the numerouss tasks that I'd perform
Of physical and emotional compensation
CHORUS
Acknowledgement that I acted foolishly
Increasingly desparate pleas for your return
Sorrow for my infidelity
Vain hope that my sins are forgivable
Appeal for one more opportunity
Drop to my knees to elecit crowd response
Prayers to my chosen deity
Modulation and I hold a high note...
CHORUS
No, it's not up to you. (Score:3, Insightful)
No. You don't have a say in this and you know it. Why ask? The industry is fueled by american teenagers. They aren't the wisest shoppers, nor the most picky. Give them a set of boobies to admire and some bling bling to think about and out come the $20's.
An example: Brittney Spear's popularity. 12 magazine covers and over 20 tv appearances this month alone. Who reading this actually buys her CDs? Probably not many, she's a manufactured star for highschool kids.
I do wish the sound of a 'band' would become popular again. It seems like ever since the alternative explosion in the early 90's every white-bread band has to sound the same. Can one male singer (not hiphop) NOT sing through his nose for a song or two? That, and the heroin voice (ie. Faith No More) is so damn overdone. What are we up to now? 5 or 6 top 40 bands that might as well have the same vocalist and guitarist? There must be some algorythm that picks up on this in the 'hitability' analysis.
This isn't anything new, I guess. It's like that Monkies tv show modelled after the Beatles. Except now, it's not a tv show and it's got a lot of re-runs.
Incomplete (Score:2)
Not sure why this is such a big deal... (Score:2)
If someone does end on the tonic, it's going to frustrate a piece, for example. It doesn't take a learned audience to notice this, but a trained audience will realize why the piece doesn't sound finished. (The tonic is the first note in the scale a piece is in.)
The blues is formulaic. It sticks to the same chord progressions. Rock sticks to a similar set of chord progressions.. T
Re:Who? (Score:2)
Re:Ummm (Score:2)
Welcome to the dupe of this article... (Score:3)
"Melancholy Elephants" by Spider Robinson (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe it could compose the chant melody by recognizing actual chords in the samples, and applying known hamonic rules to end up with a melody to put on top of it
But because the space of pleasing music is so littered with copyrights [slashdot.org], anybody who publishes such a song may get sued into oblivion. Believe me; I tried implementing algorithmic composition once, but I noticed bits and pieces of songs I knew to be copyrighted in its output, and who knows what other copyrights the program violated.
Along these
Re:Music-Human Interaction (Score:2)