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human-computer interaction

Augmenting Music Sheets with Harmonic Fingerprints

arXiv:1908.00003 · doi:10.1145/3342558.3345395

summary

The paper introduces a visualization technique that adds harmonic fingerprint glyphs, based on the circle-of-fifths concept, to digital music sheets to help students and musicians quickly grasp harmonic relationships, and validates its effectiveness with a user study.

Abstract

Conventional Music Notation (CMN) is the well-established foundation for the written communication of musical information, such as rhythm, harmony, or timbre. However, CMN suffers from the complexity of its visual encoding and the need for extensive training to acquire proficiency and legibility. While alternative notations using additional visual variables (such as color to improve pitch identification) have been proposed, the music community does not readily accept notation systems that vary widely from the CMN. Therefore, to support student musicians in understanding the harmonic relationship of notes, instead of replacing the CMN, we present a visualization technique that augments a digital music sheet with a harmonic fingerprint glyph. Our design exploits the circle of fifths - a fundamental concept in music theory, as a visual metaphor. By attaching these visual glyphs to each bar of a selected composition we provide additional information about the salient harmonic features available in a musical piece. We conducted a user study to analyze the performance of experts and non-experts in an identification and comparison task of recurring patterns. The evaluation shows that the harmonic fingerprint supports these tasks without the need for close-reading, as when compared to a not-annotated music sheet.

(9+1) pages; 5 figures; User Study

Topics & keywords

#music notation#visualization#harmonic analysis#user study#digital sheet musicharmonic fingerprintglyphcircle of fifthsdigital music sheetexpert vs non-expert evaluation