YouTube home Comedy Week on YouTube
Upload

(Part 2) It's all in the timing: How musicians communicate emotion

mcgilluniversity mcgilluniversity·400 videos
2,295
5,403
Like     Dislike 1

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to like mcgilluniversity's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to dislike mcgilluniversity's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to add mcgilluniversity's video to your playlist.

Uploaded on Feb 25, 2011

"It's All in the Timing" - Part 2 - with McGill psychology professor and best selling author Daniel Levitin. Find out how the music industry might react to his latest research on musical expression. See Part 1 at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJMwWX...

  • Category

  • License

    Standard YouTube License

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

The interactive transcript could not be loaded.

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Ratings have been disabled for this video.
Rating is available when the video has been rented.
This feature is not available right now. Please try again later.

All Comments (8)

Sign in now to post a comment!
  • fghjhgf99

    thumbs up for self-playing piano

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate fghjhgf99's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate fghjhgf99's comment.
  • theofficialDeFalco

    Wow! I wonder if an algorithm could be created to represent multiple musician's ways of communicating emotion. After all, we are all individuals. We don't all necessarily want to sound the "same."

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate theofficialDeFalco's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate theofficialDeFalco's comment.
  • EthicalJournalism

    Interesting. I fail to see, however, the "rigorous scientific method" in this study. What was the control? Did he sit there while people listened to the music? What kind of effect did the physical environment play on the people's reaction? Music is part of an atmosphere — Chopin playing in a soundproof studio sounds different outside, in a theater, at a bar, in a home. Many more things go into how a person perceives a song's expressiveness than the four quantifiable elements suggested.

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate EthicalJournalism's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate EthicalJournalism's comment.
  • thegreeensky

    nice video.. thanks for sharing...

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate thegreeensky's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate thegreeensky's comment.
  • POBox1999

    Take a digital drum sequence and apply the reverse quantize algorithm to it to make it ever-so-slightly more variable. Like what was done here; but instead of randomly selecting 125% 150%; set the right level based on data of real people's musical tastes

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate POBox1999's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate POBox1999's comment.
  • POBox1999

    The results of this study are not surprising and are part of what we know; but it's an interesting approach for quantifying musicians' expression/touch. It would be interesting to see if these data from a larger sample, could be applied to create an excellent reverse-quantize algorithm.

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate POBox1999's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate POBox1999's comment.
  • Discchord

    Thanks for sharing these. I had heard about the study, but this was a much more expressive demonstration!

    ·

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Discchord's comment.

    Sign in to YouTube

    Sign in with your YouTube Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to rate Discchord's comment.
  • Loading comment...
Loading...
Loading...
Working...
Sign in to add this to Watch Later