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Emotional Connotations of Diatonic Modes
by
Temperley, David
, Tan, Daphne
in
Anatolian languages
/ Connotation
/ Diatonic scales
/ Emotions
/ Familiarity
/ Happiness
/ Ionian mode
/ Lydian mode
/ Major scales
/ Melody
/ Music
/ Musical modes
/ Popular music
/ Sound pitch
/ Tonal centrism
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
Emotional Connotations of Diatonic Modes
by
Temperley, David
, Tan, Daphne
in
Anatolian languages
/ Connotation
/ Diatonic scales
/ Emotions
/ Familiarity
/ Happiness
/ Ionian mode
/ Lydian mode
/ Major scales
/ Melody
/ Music
/ Musical modes
/ Popular music
/ Sound pitch
/ Tonal centrism
2013
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Journal Article
Emotional Connotations of Diatonic Modes
2013
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Overview
In this experiment, participants (nonmusicians) heard pairs of melodies and had to judge which of the two melodies was happier. Each pair consisted of a single melody presented in two different diatonic modes (Lydian, Ionian, Mixolydian, Dorian, Aeolian, or Phrygian) with a constant tonic of C; all pairs of modes were used. The results suggest that modes imply increasing happiness as scale-degrees are raised, with the exception of Lydian, which is less happy than Ionian. Overall, the results are best explained by familiarity: Ionian (major mode), the most common mode in both classical and popular music, is the happiest, and happiness declines with increasing distance from Ionian. However, familiarity does not entirely explain our results. Familiarity predicts that Mixolydian would be happier than Lydian (since they are equally similar to Ionian, and Mixolydian is much more common in popular music); but for almost half of our participants, the reverse was true. This suggests that the “sharpness” of a mode also affects its perceived happiness, either due to pitch height or to the position of the scale relative to the tonic on the “line of fifths”; we favor the latter explanation.
Publisher
University of California Press,University of California Press Books Division
Subject
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