Emotion is one of the main reasons why people engage and interact with music [1] . Songs can express our inner feelings, produce goosebumps, bring us to tears, share an emotional state with a composer or performer, or trigger specific memories. Interest in a deeper understanding of the relationship between music and emotion has motivated researchers from various areas of knowledge for decades [2], including computational researchers. Imagine an algorithm capable of predicting the emotions that a listener perceives in a musical piece, or one that dynamically generates music that adapts to the mood of a conversation in a film—a particularly fascinating and provocative idea. These algorithms typify music emotion recognition (MER), a computatio...