Melodic Pattern Repetition and Efficient Encoding: A Corpus Study

Authors

  • David Temperley Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v18i2.9289

Keywords:

repetition, motive, corpus analysis, encoding

Abstract

Melodies are full of repeated patterns of pitch, interval, and rhythm. It has been suggested that these repeated patterns aid the listener in creating an efficient encoding; this raises the possibility that compositional practice might have evolved to facilitate this process. I propose three specific hypotheses about compositional practice: 1) Repeated intervallic patterns tend to be metrically parallel, with each instance of the pattern falling at the same position in relation to the metrical structure; 2) Purely intervallic repetitions tend to be confined to short distances (longer-distance repetitions tend to involve repetition of scale-degrees as well); 3) Repeated intervallic patterns tend to involve multiple intervals rather than single ones. In each case, I explain how such a compositional strategy might facilitate efficient encoding. Corpus analyses of classical themes and European folk songs find support for all three hypotheses.

Downloads

Published

2024-06-07

How to Cite

Temperley, D. (2024). Melodic Pattern Repetition and Efficient Encoding: A Corpus Study. Empirical Musicology Review, 18(2), 97–116. https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v18i2.9289

Issue

Section

Articles