How
do you experience (musical) time?
The
terms openness to experience and energetic extroverts have been touched on in the
blog “What type of listener are you?” To briefly recap psychologists have
divided listeners into two camps with open listeners gravitating towards
classical, blues, jazz and folk while energetic extroverts, the intense and
rebellious tribe, like rock, alternative and heavy metal music. I would like to
focus on one element of this division, the two tribal responses to rhythm.
Composers
and arrangers who use Sibelius software are aware of the export feature which
permits the construction of a score as a combined video and audio presentation.
The listener experiences a visual score with strict time audio, not a
performance. Those who view the product (You Tube or similar) often express the
opinion that a human interpretation would bring out additional qualities in the
work otherwise lacking. Pulse, vibrato, micro tuning and coloured noise such as
breath or key strokes all play some part in this evaluation.
Accepting
the argument, I have on occasion taken a PDF of the score, imported the music
into a DAW and played with the tempo to articulate particular moments of
interest inserted accelerando and ritenuto passages, and even put in slight
delays at expressive points, all with the intention of creating a more human
response. One might think of this as a parallel to a person interacting with a
piano roll. If the music contains a variety of different pulses as in the
Chopin section of Schumann’s Carnaval the efforts seem sufficient to satisfy,
but if the pulse is regular and less complex the comments about robotic v.
human performance still occur. Does this suggest that open listeners require
constant manipulation or decoration around a pulse while metronomic pulses are
more acceptable to energetic extroverts?
To
develop the idea let us consider the drum machine, and the Roland TR-808 in
particular, a machine (instrument) designed in the 1980’s by the recently
deceased Ikutaro Kakehashi. A little history lesson first, as a teenager he
repaired clocks and watches, progressing from there to founding Roland Corporation
famed for its work with synthesizers and of course drum machines. The TR-808
was used to generate the rhythm tracks of a large number of highly successful
songs and became the basis of different rock styles, in other words a huge
number of listeners were captivated by precise, machine driven rhythms. Over a
period of time programmers added imperfections, humanizing elements, lasting
fractions of a second, but randomized activity is not the same as choices made
to push or drag the rhythm, nor can the machine sense the environment of
excitement or relaxation after a musical climax created within a group of
players.
Perhaps
an energetic extrovert would argue that he/she has a best of both worlds
scenario where the instrumentalists retain a strict beat, pleasing to the
dancers, while the soloist plays or sings against the beat to provide
sufficient variation in tempo to humanize the music. I understand that the
deviations from the tempo only need to be be very slight, a movement of between
10 to 20 milliseconds can be recognized.
If
we accept this argument then the result should be applicable to both open
listeners and extroverts. The open listener might argue that the main difference
would be in the interaction of players when a more distant goal is considered, and
a gradual or progressive accelerando is required, something the Roland drum
machine is not capable of performing. Let
us not forget that there are very successful popular works that play with tempo
changes, “Come on Eileen” is a good example, it is unusual enough to have Wiki
comment on the fact in its article. Popular pieces with numerous tempo changes
can be hugely popular, Stairway to Heaven and Bohemian Rhapsody come to mind,
but popular music is a broad church.
I
came across a thought provoking quotation by Holger Hennig in Physics Today
which develops this issue:
It
turns out that human beat variation is not entirely random. In 2011, Hennig's
team had looked carefully at the timing
of a professional drummer and found that while his hits shifted ahead and
behind the beat, they shifted according to a set pattern. Not only that, the
highly precise patterns lasted for minutes. "It is as if the human
brain has an enduring memory for those deviations,"
This
takes us to another issue of time, memory and time perception.
In
simple terms psychologists are viewing the perception of time as being different
to our five senses, based on an internal clock or possibly clocks (not the
biological or circadian clocks). The process of gathering information seems
complex, requiring reorganization and distribution to various parts of the
brain, but the crux of the matter is that regularly perceived events take far
less time to process while novel or unique events take more time and our
perception is that time is drawn out. At my age the question “Where does the
time go?” takes on a different meaning. Experiments with subjecting a viewer to
regular and occasional images for the same length of time have the person
reporting the latter as being viewed for longer. Musicians are also aware of how heightened emotional states alters
the sensation of time, from the drumming of the shaman to the loss of self as experienced
in the Ring cycle or the immersive compositions of Carl Stone.
Psychologists developed
tests relating to time perception which focused on particular film genres, the
results demonstrated that fearful reactions prolonged experience, over
estimations of time when viewing horror were common. Professor Droit-Volet also notes
"quite unexpectedly, sadness
does not affect our perception of time, no doubt because the emotion felt when
watching a sad film is not strong enough to slow down physiological
functions,"
As a musician I find that contrary to
experience, listening to recordings of Clive Bell playing the Shakuhachi in
pieces like Sanya Sugakaki induces a sense of stillness which makes the
estimation of real time very difficult.
https://youtu.be/nEbmGsy7bao?list=PL8JEnivnOMpOn8SBOlkZ6Dd2UgpqKoEzM
The research is ongoing, I hope to
learn more of the work being undertaken; the following quotation fascinates me
"There is no single, uniform time, but rather multiple
times which we experience. Our temporal distortions are a direct translation of
the way in which our brain and body adapt to these multiple times, the times of
life."
Having
spent some time with this issue before posting the blog I came to a simple
resolution of the question regarding the difference between open listeners and
energetic extroverts. When you are dancing to music it is much more difficult
to follow a train of thought. There are several meditative systems that focus
on ecstatic experiences through movement, the Sufi dervishes being one. The types
of music preferred by open listeners involve detailed processes of manipulation
where the church pew or concert hall seat is perfectly acceptable. Perhaps our
musical preference is rooted in how we are inclined to express ourselves
through body movement in which case we should reconsider how audiences are
expected to be treated when listening to, let us say, an energetic John Adams
work! I think that process is under way but has yet to reach its proper
conclusion.
Thank you for sharing your time in reading the blog, please feel free to share any particular experiences you have relating to music and the perception of time.