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The maths behind the music of Johann Sebastian Bach

Spektrum der Wissenschaft
2/3/2024
Translation: machine translated

Johann Sebastian Bach is considered one of the greatest composers who ever lived. Why his music sounds so good can now be explained mathematically.

"Bach seemed to be an ideal starting point for this study, as his work has a strong mathematical structure," Kulkarni told the American Physical Society. His pieces also feature many different compositional forms, from preludes to fugues to chorales. Kulkarni and her team have analysed hundreds of them.

How much information is there in a piece of music?

The researchers recognised a pattern: the same compositional forms had similar amounts of entropy. For example, chorales that are sung in churches usually contain little information, in contrast to toccatas and fugues, which have entertaining and surprising passages. According to Kulkarni, the differences in entropy thus reflect the functions of the different compositional forms.

I would like to do the same analysis for other composers and non-Western music.
Suman Kulkarni, Physikerin

As the researchers found, the difference between the networks was small for pieces of music by Bach - in contrast to randomly generated networks, which they also analysed with their computer model. They conclude that musical compositions apparently minimise discrepancies between the structure of a piece and human perceptions of it.

Spectrum of Science

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Originalartikel auf Spektrum.de
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