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Hearing in Time: Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter
 
 

Hearing in Time: Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter [Hardcover]

Justin London (Author)

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Book Description

0195160819 978-0195160819 September 2, 2004 1
Our sense that a waltz is "in three" or a blues song is "in four with a shuffle" comes from our sense of musical meter. Hearing in Time explores musical meter from the point of view of cognitive theories of perception and attention. London explores how our ability to follow musical meter is simply a specific instance of our more general ability to synchronize our attention to regularly recurring events in our environment. As such, musical meter is subject to a number of fundamental perceptual and cognitive constraints, which form the cornerstones of London's account. Because listening to music, like many other rhythmic activities, is something that we often do, London views it as a skilled activity for performers and non-performers alike. Hearing in Time approaches musical meter in the context of music as it is actually performed, rather than as a theoretical ideal. Its approach is not based on any particular musical style or cultural practice, so it uses familiar examples from a broad range of music--Beethoven and Bach to Brubeck and Ghanaian drumming. Taking this broad approach brings out a number of fundamental similarities between a variety of different metric phenomena, such as the difference between so-called simple versus complex or additive meters. Because of its accessible style--only a modest ability to read a musical score is presumed--Hearing in Time is for anyone interested in rhythm and meter, including cognitive psychologists, musicologists, musicians, and music theorists.

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Hearing in Time: Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter + Sweet Anticipation: Music and the Psychology of Expectation (Bradford Books)


Editorial Reviews

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"London is able to formulate interesting hypotheses about a broad scope of phenomena from the performer's choice of tempo for a given piece to the affect or character of rhythmic figures performed in different tempos...London's study also goes beyond traditional theories of meter in that it embraces both Western adn non-Western musical idioms."--Journal of Music Theory


About the Author

Justin London is at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
As we move through the world, we seek information: What is out there? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
maximal evenness, metric entrainment, maximal pulse salience, attentional peaks, meters hypothesis, compound subdivision, subjective rhythmization, temporal attending, tactus level, metric flux, metric dissonance, deadpan performance, metrical types, rhythmic surface, metric hierarchy, metrical hierarchy, notated measure, metric cycle, attentional energy, expressive timing, musical meter, expressive variation, metric context, rhythmic streams, metric ambiguity
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Meter-Rhythm Interactions, Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, Kind of Attentional Behavior, Non-Isochronous Meters, Ground Rules
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