IN line with the present-day digital turn in the humanities, musicology is showing an increasing tendency towards the study of large corpora. 2 This has materialized in the emergence of scholarly repositories offering ground truth and automatic annotations of musical parameters from both scores and recordings. In the same way as scholars in the symbolic domain have laid especial emphasis on melody and harmony, 3 the audio domain largely concentrates on timing and, sometimes, intonation. Examples include Saarland Music Data, 4 CorpusCOFLA, 5 and the MAESTRO, 6 URMP, 7 Bach10, 8 and Choral Singing datasets. 9 Such audio corpora provide data extracted not from historical commercial recordings but rather from files recorded for the purpose of being analyzed.
In this context, the Recorded Brahms Corpus (RBC) aims at benefiting computational musicology and performance studies by offering manually-extracted data of a number of performer duos' timing and dynamic decisions in commercial studio or live recordings (1934–2019) of select movements of Brahms's Cello Sonatas, Opp. 38 and 99. In this manner, it offers new insights into chamber music playing, which is necessary in order to construct narratives of performance techniques, decisions, and style.
The RBC corpus presents data extracted from 21 recordings of select movements of Brahms Cello Sonatas. For easier navigation in the corpus, the movements are labeled according to their opus number followed by a lowercase roman numeral indicating their position within each composition. For the recordings, abbreviations have been used (refer to Table 1). 10
Abbreviation | Cellist | Pianist | Year | Label | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
C/H(36) | Pau Casals | Mieczysław Horszowski | 1936 | HMV, DB 3059-62 | Brahms: Sonata in F major (F Dur) |
C/H(58) | Pau Casals | Mieczysław Horszowski | 1958 | ||
DP/B | Jacqueline du Pré | Daniel Barenboim | 1968 | Angel Records, S-36544 | Brahms: The Two Sonatas for Cello and Piano |
F/B | Pierre Fournier | Wilhelm Backhaus | 1955 | Decca, LXT 5077 | Sonata No 1 in E MINOR for 'cello and piano – Sonata No 2 in F MAJOR for 'cello and piano – BRAHMS |
F/vdP | Emmanuel Feuermann | Theo van der Pas | 1934 | Columbia Masterworks, Set No. 236 | Brahms: Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 1 In E minor, Op. 38 |
G/G | Karine Georgian | Pavel Gililov | 1994 | Biddulph Recordings, 744718101429 | Brahms: Cello Sonatas (Op. 38 & 99) |
G/Gr | Sol Gabetta | Hélène Grimaud | 2012 | Deutsche Grammophon, 0289 479 0965 1 | Duo |
G/Gu | Anne Gastinel | François Frédéric Guy | 1999 | Naïve (Valois), V4817 | Johannes Brahms: Sonates pour Violoncelle & Piano |
I/H | Steven Isserlis | Stephen Hough | 2005 | Hyperion, BE114A0B | Johannes Brahms: Cello Sonatas |
M/A | Yo-Yo Ma | Emanuel Ax | 1991 | Sony Classical SK 48191 | Brahms: Sonatas for Cello & Piano Opp. 38, 99 and 108 |
M/G | Mischa Maisky | Pavel Gililov | 1998 | Deutsche Grammophon, 0289 459 6772 1 GH | Brahms: Die Cellosonaten – Lieder ohne Worte |
M/L | Truls Mørk | Juhani Lagerspetz | 1988 | Virgin Classics, VC 5 45052 2 | Brahms: Cello Sonatas – Song Transcriptions |
M/P | António Meneses | Maria João Pires | 2013 | Deutsche Grammophon, 0289 479 0965 1 | The Wigmore Hall Recital |
P/N | Asier Polo | Eldar Nebolsin | 2019 | Ibs Classical IBS82019 | Brahms. Cello Sonatas |
P/R(36) | Gregor Piatigorsky | Arthur Rubinstein | 1936 | HMV, DB 2952-54 | Brahms: Sonata No. 2 in E minor, Op. 38 |
P/R(66) | Gregor Piatigorsky | Arthur Rubinstein | 1966 | RCA Red Seal, ARL1-2085 | Brahms. Sonatas for Cello and Piano – E Minor Op. 38 / F Major Op. 99 |
P/S | Gregor Piatigorsky | Reginald Stewart | 1947 | Music & Arts, CD 644 | compiled in The Art of Gregor Piatigorsky (1903-1976) |
P/V | Boris Pergamenschikow | Lars Vogt | 2002 | EMI Classics, 557526 | Brahms – Schumann – Works for Cello and Piano |
R/S | Mstislav Rostropovich | Rudolf Serkin | 1983 | Deutsche Grammophon, 410 510-2 | Johannes Brahms: Die Cellosonaten – The Cello Sonatas |
S/B | János Starker | Abba Bogin | 1951 | Period Records, SPL 593 | Brahms: Sonatas for Cello and Piano |
S/S | János Starker | György Sebȍk | 1964 | Speaker Corners/Mercury Records, SR90392 | Brahms: Sonatas for Cello and Piano |
The RBC dataset is available for consultation and download at https://github.com/allorens/RBC/. At this stage, the repository contains data from recordings of the first and second movements of Brahms's two cello sonatas, Opp. 38 and 99, as well as of the third movement of the Op. 38.
In the repository, scores, 11 scape plots, 12 and performance data can be found. 13 Scores are provided in PDF, MIDI, musicXML, MUSX, and MSCX formats. In order to facilitate interpretation of the data, MSCX scores contain note numberings for each part (piano and cello) separately. Scape plots are given as PNG files.
Data for each recording are organized by measurement unit:
The corresponding Sonic Visualiser (SV) file is provided in each of the data folders, along with TXT files for the five parameters that the corpus evaluates (see Table 2).
Parameter | Abbreviation in files | Unit |
---|---|---|
Beat and note onsets | onsets | s |
Beat and note durations | duration | s |
Tempo fluctuations | tempo | bpm |
Continuous dynamic variations | smoothed_power 16 | dB |
Dynamic values at specific instants | dB_per_beat | dB |
All TXT files present the same internal structure:
Exceptionally, the smoothed_power files lack the third column, as measurements are made on a continuous basis and not at specific beat instants; dB_per_beat files lack column 2 as its position value is contained in column 1.
Merged data files are provided in CSV format too. To facilitate download, they are compressed into a single ZIP file found in the main data folder of the repository. Merged CSV files for beat measurements contain the following five columns: onset (in seconds), label (as measure.beat), duration (in seconds), tempo (in bpm), and intensity (in dB). Merged CSV files for note data are restricted to onset (in seconds), label (as note number), duration (in seconds), and bar in which the particular note appears.
In total, the RBC dataset contains 3225 files (see Table 3).
Recording | Scores | SV files | TXT files | CSV files | PNG files |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Op. 38i | 5 | 4 x 20 = 80 | 19 x 20 = 380 | 5 x 20 = 100 | 9 x 20 = 180 |
Op. 38ii | 5 | 4 x 20 = 80 | 19 x 20 = 380 | 5 x 20 = 100 | 9 x 20 = 180 |
Op. 38iii | 5 | 4 x 20 = 80 | 19 x 20 = 380 | 5 x 20 = 100 | 9 x 20 = 180 |
Op. 99i | 5 | 3 x 15 = 45 | 14 x 15 = 210 | 4 x 20 = 80 | 9 x 15 = 135 |
Op. 99ii | 5 | 5 x 15 = 45 | 24 x 15 = 210 | 6 x 20 = 120 | 9 x 15 = 135 |
Total | 25 | 330 | 1560 | 500 | 810 |
All files are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. 17
After engraving the scores in Finale26 18 and exporting them in various formats (see above), ground-truth performance annotations were obtained by:
Subsequently, additional timing data were automatically obtained by creating, for each measurement unit, two Time Values layers 21 to yield information regarding:
In the case of beat measurements only, further data were automatically extracted by:
The data presented in this repository can be used in the study of specific performance decisions in chamber music playing. A most direct application would be the investigation of changes and constants in performance styles in the last one-hundred years. Specifically, the analysis of the data can offer insights into the similarity between individual duos and/or individual performers' playing styles.
For instance, correlation indexes between several recordings can be obtained for the duration of notes in select parts and passages. For example, measurements for quarter note durations in the opening measures of the first movement in Brahms's Op. 38i can be compared and correlated (see Table 4).
Specifically, van der Pas (F&vdP) and Hough (I&H) play in the most dissimilar manner (ρ = -.10), whereas Barenboim and Lagerspetz's durational strategies are highly correlated (ρ = .90). Interestingly, Gililov plays those eight measures in fairly distinct ways in the two recordings in which he participates (G&G and M&G) (ρ = .40).
Similarly, durational data can facilitate the analysis and representation of the varying proportions established between the various formal sections in a given piece. In the second movement of Brahms's Op. 38, the expansion of the last phrase in the central trio can derive into a greatly enlarged central section, minimizing the structural weight of the scherzo sections, as in M&G (see Figure 1b). Other performers, such as F&B, would opt for the opposite strategy, i.e., enlarging the opening statement of the scherzo theme with a shortened central trio (see Figure 1a). Intermediate, more balanced solutions too are to be found (see P&N in Figure 1c).
Fig. 1 Proportional durations of the various formals sections in Brahms's Op. 38ii:a) F&B; b) M&G; c) P&N.
Scherzo (mm. 0.3–76.2): a (mm. 0.3–28.2), b (mm. 28.3–58.2), c (mm.58.3–76.2);
Trio (mm. 76.3–115.2): c1 (mm. 76.3–89.2), c2 (mm. 76.3–89.2), d1 (mm. 89.3–108.2), d2 (mm. 108.3–115.2);
Scherzo (mm. 0.3–76.2): a (mm. 0.3–28.2), b (mm. 28.3–58.2), c (mm.58.3–76.2).
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 C&H(58)a | - | .68 | .40 | .56 | .59 | .58 | .66 | .47 | .52 | .39 | .71 | .57 | .61 | .72 | .77 | .82 | .57 | .31 | .36 | .57 |
2 DP&B | - | .65 | .59 | .67 | .85 | .49 | .66 | .71 | .69 | .90 | .69 | .63 | .74 | .68 | .67 | .71 | .41 | .45 | .69 | |
3 F&B | - | .21 | .66 | .61 | .17 | .37 | .23 | .24 | .45 | .30 | .27 | .78 | .65 | .58 | .62 | .32 | .42 | .63 | ||
4 F&vdP | - | .22 | .37 | .41 | -.10 | .28 | .3. | .47 | .24 | .36 | .48 | .73 | .53 | .70 | -.07 | .36 | .68 | |||
5 G&G | - | .67 | .43 | .60 | .39 | .40 | .61 | .41 | .39 | .80 | .64 | .58 | .56 | .42 | .68 | .54 | ||||
6 G&Gr | - | .54 | .61 | .62 | .54 | .87 | .73 | .72 | .63 | .61 | .67 | .71 | .31 | .47 | .71 | |||||
7 G&Gu | - | .51 | .29 | .17 | .58 | .57 | .66 | .57 | .61 | .68 | .47 | .43 | .47 | .48 | ||||||
8 I&H | - | .35 | .50 | .74 | .49 | .40 | .52 | .25 | .41 | .21 | .72 | .36 | .20 | |||||||
9 M&A | - | .66 | .67 | .55 | .66 | .35 | .44 | .57 | .47 | .17 | .38 | .46 | ||||||||
10 M&G | - | .69 | .44 | .39 | .41 | .39 | .38 | .28 | .40 | .48 | .30 | |||||||||
11 M&L | - | .70 | .64 | .63 | .59 | .62 | .67 | .35 | .60 | .67 | ||||||||||
12 M&P | - | .79 | .41 | .48 | .52 | .46 | .14 | .32 | .44 | |||||||||||
13 P&N | - | .40 | .54 | .66 | .52 | .27 | .51 | .52 | ||||||||||||
14 P&R(36) | - | .84 | .81 | .61 | .53 | .42 | .60 | |||||||||||||
15 P&R(66) | - | .88 | .81 | .30 | .47 | .81 | ||||||||||||||
16 P&S | - | .62 | .51 | .51 | .63 | |||||||||||||||
17 P&V | - | .02 | .50 | .99 | ||||||||||||||||
18 R&S | - | .23 | .02 | |||||||||||||||||
19 S&B | - | .59 | ||||||||||||||||||
20 S&S | - |
Note: a For specification of abbreviations see Table 1.
Note onset data for the two instrumental parts can also serve the study of ensemble microtiming practices, including asynchrony, as in Llorens (2017) and Demos et al. (2016). Finally, studies such as Rink et al. (2011) and Llorens (2018) have employed similar data to analyze the influence of performance parameters in the inference of structural relations in music, thus contributing to general music theory.
It is planned to expand the dataset by including recordings of the third and fourth movements of Brahms's Op. 99. Similarly, data from further recordings will be added in the future. In the hope of also creating a collaborative repository, the RBC affords expansion to host data extracted from recordings of other compositions by Brahms. The Violin Sonatas Opp. 78, 100, and 108 are being contemplated as the first step in that direction.
This article was copyedited by Annaliese Micallef Grimaud and layout edited by Diana Kayser.