Abstract:Manual melody detection is a tedious task requiring high expertise level, while automatic detection is often not expressive or powerful enough. Thus, we present MelodyVis, a visual application designed in collaboration with musicology experts to explore melodic patterns in digital sheet music. MelodyVis features five connected views, including a Melody Operator Graph and a Voicing Timeline. The system utilizes eight atomic operators, such as transposition and mirroring, to capture melody repetitions and variations. Users can start their analysis by manually selecting patterns in the sheet view, and then identifying other patterns based on the selected samples through an interactive exploration process. We conducted a user study to investigate the effectiveness and usefulness of our approach and its integrated melodic operators, including usability and mental load questions. We compared the analysis executed by 25 participants with and without the operators. The study results indicate that the participants could identify at least twice as many patterns with activated operators. MelodyVis allows analysts to steer the analysis process and interpret results. Our study also confirms the usefulness of MelodyVis in supporting common analytical tasks in melodic analysis, with participants reporting improved pattern identification and interpretation. Thus, MelodyVis addresses the limitations of fully-automated approaches, enabling music analysts to step into the analysis process and uncover and understand intricate melodic patterns and transformations in sheet music.
Abstract:Manually investigating sheet music collections is challenging for music analysts due to the magnitude and complexity of underlying features, structures, and contextual information. However, applying sophisticated algorithmic methods would require advanced technical expertise that analysts do not necessarily have. Bridging this gap, we contribute CorpusVis, an interactive visual workspace, enabling scalable and multi-faceted analysis. Our proposed visual analytics dashboard provides access to computational methods, generating varying perspectives on the same data. The proposed application uses metadata including composers, type, epoch, and low-level features, such as pitch, melody, and rhythm. To evaluate our approach, we conducted a pair analytics study with nine participants. The qualitative results show that CorpusVis supports users in performing exploratory and confirmatory analysis, leading them to new insights and findings. In addition, based on three exemplary workflows, we demonstrate how to apply our approach to different tasks, such as exploring musical features or comparing composers.