Re: sometimes behave so strangely (Jyrki Tuomainen )


Subject: Re: sometimes behave so strangely
From:    Jyrki Tuomainen  <jyrtuoma@xxxxxxxx>
Date:    Mon, 18 Dec 2006 16:18:16 +0000
List-Archive:<http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=AUDITORY>

Jeff Bilmes wrote: > Lastly, the Frank Zappa song from the early 1980s I mentioned earlier > (where Steve Vai is duplicating > Zappa's speech on his guitar) is on the album "The Man from Utopia" > and the song is "The Dangerous > Kitchen" (you can hear an excerpt on amazon.com). > http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B0000009T5001006/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_006/002-2183087-3713663 > > Hi Jeff and list. I would consider "The Jazz Discharge Party Hats" (from the same album Jeff suggested) is more related to the theme of this discussion... ;-) (please use (unfortunately) Internet Exploder to make the link work ... http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B0000009T5001009/102-5120799-7736912). More to the point, I've already earlier listened to the sentence (and did it again to be sure), and to me Diane Deutsch's phrase is sung only when you _know_ (by listening to the repeated presentation) that it's sung. It is a really good demonstration! However, once you realise what the rhythm and melody is then you immediately recognize that the phrase in the ordinal text is tampered and inconsistent with/different from the rest of the stuff... so it's like sine wave speech, and to me, it is another example of the importance of "perceptual set" in the sense that it highlights the top-down nature of perception. I think my point here is that when your perception is set to speech comprehension you dont' care about acoustic details unless you are specifically told so or learn about other possible interpretations. Best wishes, -Jyrki > Best, > > -- Jeff > > >>I never heard Diana's original example, but Jeff's music example sets the stage, I think. >>Any difference between speach and song must be an effect of culture in some sense. We have operas, musicals, vaudevilles, etc, etc. I guess we all know that a good speech is some content and a lot of rythm. >>If we repeat a spoken message over and over, the semantics will disappear. Go to a mass (any church), few will get any of the words, they hear a hymn or something. I don't think acoustics plays a role here. >>Enjoy a concert, be it classical, rock, rap or jazz, you will hear sounds, notes, rythms which may be speach, may be music. Any speach has some kind of melody, definitely a tempo and a rythm. Jeff's link provides a good example of someone taking advantage of this. When "wah-wah" pedals were introduced for guitarists in the late 60s "talking guitars" were everywhere, remember. >>Flemming >> >>________________________________ >> >>From: AUDITORY - Research in Auditory Perception on behalf of Jeff Bilmes >>Sent: Sat 12/16/2006 8:01 PM >>To: AUDITORY@xxxxxxxx >>Subject: Re: [AUDITORY] sometimes behave so strangely >> >> >> >>Diana Deutsch wrote: >> >> >>> A number of people have pointed out that the timing characteristics >>>of the pattern could be important. I agree - the pattern has an >>>emphatic rhythm, and the repetition of this rhythm may help to induce >>>listening in 'music mode'. Also, in a study in progress we're looking >>>at the effect of the durations of the pauses between repetitions, and >>>it appears that lengthening these pauses reduces the effect - or at >>>least slows down its development- the formal experiment has yet to be >>>completed. And it's true that I intentionally configured the pauses in >>>the published example so that the entire sequence of repetitions >>>should be metrically coherent. >>> >>> >>> >> >>It may be of interest to know that just about any speech can be made >>into music given the right context, even without any repetition or >>"metric coherence" at all. It is, for example, recently becoming >>practice in Jazz music to use speech to obtain ideas about melody. In >>some cases, the recorded speech is used as the melody itself done in >>unison with a non-vocal musical instrument. A great example is Jason >>Moran, a well known jazz pianist in the NYC area. He recorded a >>Turkish woman speaking on the phone with her mother, and then put it >>to song in a jazz trio (piano, bass, drums) context. You hear the >>speech, Moran duplicating the melody on acoustic piano along with the >>speech, Moran harmonizing with his left hand, and the bass and drum >>accompaniment. The resulting song excerpt is here: >> >>http://www.alkem.org/monsterisland/mp3/jmoran/thebandwagon/ringing_my_phone_excerpt.mp3 >> >>There are other examples of his where he uses speech in another >>language in the same way. Note that Moran and his band have memorized >>this speech and use the tape of it live when they perform this piece >>(I recently saw him perform it live). >> >>It should also be noted, Franz Zappa back in the early 1980s hired a >>guitarist named "Steve Vai" to transcribe on guitar some of Zappa's >>spoken phrases and play them back on guitar along with the speech >>recording (Vai is most noted for transcribing Zappa's guitar solos, >>but he also transcribed Zappa's speech). I don't recall the album/song >>that this is on, but it was in the early 1980s (if I remember, I'll send >>it out). >> >>Best, >> >> -- Jeff >> >> >> > -- New temporary address,from July 2006 to Autumn 2007 Jyrki Tuomainen, University College London, Human Communication Science Remax House, 31/32 Alfred Place, London WC1E 7DP, UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 4214 (Internal 24214), Fax: +44 (0)20 7713 0861 j.tuomainen@xxxxxxxx http://www.hcs.ucl.ac.uk/ --


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