This response offers an alternate interpretation for the data described in Joseph Daniele's 2016 article "A tool for the quantitative anthropology of music: Use of the nPVI equation to analyze rhythmic variability within long-term historical patterns in music." I examine Daniele's argument that there is an overall rising trend in rhythmic variability in German composition from 1600-1950, and offer an alternate, historically informed explanation based on the re-examination of the data. The rising trend does not appear to be consistent throughout time, and rather than being the result of the waning influence of Italian music on German music, I suggest an alternative hypothesis concerning documented differences between late 19th century German...
The usefulness of advanced statistical approaches in performance-based analysis has been demonstrate...
In “National Metrical Types in Nineteenth Century Art Song” Leigh Van Handel gives a sympathetic c...
This is a review of Harrison's (2021) paper "Social Mechanisms of Stylistic Change: A Case Study fro...
The development of musical style across time and geography is of particular interest to historians a...
This article is in response to Leigh VanHandel's "The War of the Romantics: An Alternate Hypothesis ...
Background. Research has used the normalised Pairwise Variability Index (nPVI) to examine relationsh...
Research has used the normalized pairwise variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
Research has used the normalized pairwise variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
RESEARCH HAS USED THE NORMALIZED PAIRWISE variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
the historical study of musical rhythm based on an empirical measure of rhythm known as the nPVI (‘n...
This article is in response to Leigh Van Handel’s "The war of the Romantics: An alternative hypothes...
Statistical techniques are well established in many historical disciplines and are used extensively ...
Ladinig and Huron’s (2010) investigation of the relationship between mode (major-minor) and dynamics...
The development of new statistical and computational methods is increasingly making it possible to b...
This paper tests two hypotheses: (1) the normalized Pairwise Variability Index (nPVI) values compute...
The usefulness of advanced statistical approaches in performance-based analysis has been demonstrate...
In “National Metrical Types in Nineteenth Century Art Song” Leigh Van Handel gives a sympathetic c...
This is a review of Harrison's (2021) paper "Social Mechanisms of Stylistic Change: A Case Study fro...
The development of musical style across time and geography is of particular interest to historians a...
This article is in response to Leigh VanHandel's "The War of the Romantics: An Alternate Hypothesis ...
Background. Research has used the normalised Pairwise Variability Index (nPVI) to examine relationsh...
Research has used the normalized pairwise variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
Research has used the normalized pairwise variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
RESEARCH HAS USED THE NORMALIZED PAIRWISE variability index (nPVI) to examine relationships between ...
the historical study of musical rhythm based on an empirical measure of rhythm known as the nPVI (‘n...
This article is in response to Leigh Van Handel’s "The war of the Romantics: An alternative hypothes...
Statistical techniques are well established in many historical disciplines and are used extensively ...
Ladinig and Huron’s (2010) investigation of the relationship between mode (major-minor) and dynamics...
The development of new statistical and computational methods is increasingly making it possible to b...
This paper tests two hypotheses: (1) the normalized Pairwise Variability Index (nPVI) values compute...
The usefulness of advanced statistical approaches in performance-based analysis has been demonstrate...
In “National Metrical Types in Nineteenth Century Art Song” Leigh Van Handel gives a sympathetic c...
This is a review of Harrison's (2021) paper "Social Mechanisms of Stylistic Change: A Case Study fro...