Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

The Musical Timespace


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Melody is the spatial shape of movement


When the movement of sound is related to a pattern of pitch intervals,


melody arises. Findings of W. Jay Dowling based on melody recognition


experiments shed light on this phenomenon. Dowling has developed a
two-component theory of melody, stating that


actual melodies, heard or sung, are the product of two kinds of
underlying schemata. First, there is the melodic contour - the pattern
of ups and downs - that characterizes a particular melody. Second,
there is the overlearned musical scale to which the contour is applied
and that underlies many different melodies. It is as though the scale
constituted a ladder or a framework on which the ups and downs of
the contour were hung. (Dowling, 1978)

This is a description of the interaction taking place when the movement of


sound in the sound height continuum is met with the process of perceptual


focusing on discrete pitches.


An overlearned musical scale is stored in long-term memory, from

where it can be recalled as an expectation of a certain pattern of pitch inter-


vals.


When a movement of sound is heard, its variation of sound height is

experienced in working memory and compared with one or several


well-known interval patterns stored in long-term memory. The selection of


interval patterns available for comparison depends on the previous


musical experience of the individual.


If the movement of sound seems to fit into a well-known interval
pattern, it is heard as a familiar kind of melody. If it does not seem to fit


into a well-known pattern, the movement of sound is heard as "out of


tune" or "a strange kind of melody", or as sound without a melody.


If the movement of a sonorous form can be adapted to a familiar fram-

ework of pitch intervals, it can be memorized as a melodic contour. If it


cannot be adapted to a framework of intervals, it can be memorized as a


sound shape.


Melody arises as a secondary listening dimension between the basic dimen-


sions movement and pitch height. Rhytm arises as


a secondary listening dimension between the basic dimensions movement


and pulse. Harmony arises as a secondary listening


dimension between the basic dimensions timbre and pitch height.


The relationships between these three secondary dimensions and the

five basic dimensions are shown in the model Fig. 6.5. The memorized


representations of the basic dimensions are indicated in the model.


6 – Macrotemporal listening dimensions: Movement, Pulse, Rhythm and Melody

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Fig. 6.5. Five basic and three secondary listening dimensions.
Memorized representations are indicated in italics.
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