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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Surf Musician »

Permalink WSJ: Anatomy of a Tear-Jerker

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Obviously this isn't about surf music, but an interesting article from the songwriter's/performer's perspective.

The Wall Street Journal
LIFE & CULTURE
FEBRUARY 11, 2012

Anatomy of a Tear-Jerker
Why does Adele's 'Someone Like You' make everyone cry? Science has found the formula

By MICHAELEEN DOUCLEFF

image

On Sunday night, the British singer-songwriter Adele is expected to sweep the Grammys. Three of her six nominations are for her rollicking hit "Rolling in the Deep." But it's her ballad "Someone Like You" that has risen to near-iconic status recently, due in large part to its uncanny power to elicit tears and chills from listeners. The song is so famously sob-inducing that "Saturday Night Live" recently ran a skit in which a group of co-workers play the tune so they can all have a good cry together.

Adele, the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter performed "Someone Like You" from her latest album "21" at WSJ Cafe

What explains the magic of Adele's song? Though personal experience and culture play into individual reactions, researchers have found that certain features of music are consistently associated with producing strong emotions in listeners. Combined with heartfelt lyrics and a powerhouse voice, these structures can send reward signals to our brains that rival any other pleasure.

Twenty years ago, the British psychologist John Sloboda conducted a simple experiment. He asked music lovers to identify passages of songs that reliably set off a physical reaction, such as tears or goose bumps. Participants identified 20 tear-triggering passages, and when Dr. Sloboda analyzed their properties, a trend emerged: 18 contained a musical device called an "appoggiatura."

An appoggiatura is a type of ornamental note that clashes with the melody just enough to create a dissonant sound. "This generates tension in the listener," said Martin Guhn, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia who co-wrote a 2007 study on the subject. "When the notes return to the anticipated melody, the tension resolves, and it feels good."

Chills often descend on listeners at these moments of resolution. When several appoggiaturas occur next to each other in a melody, it generates a cycle of tension and release. This provokes an even stronger reaction, and that is when the tears start to flow.

"Someone Like You," which Adele wrote with Dan Wilson, is sprinkled with ornamental notes similar to appoggiaturas. In addition, during the chorus, Adele slightly modulates her pitch at the end of long notes right before the accompaniment goes to a new harmony, creating mini-roller coasters of tension and resolution, said Dr. Guhn.

To learn more about the formula for a tear-jerker, a few years ago Dr. Guhn and his colleague Marcel Zentner found musical excerpts—from Mendelssohn's "Trio for Piano" and Barber's "Adagio for Strings," for example—that reliably produce the chills and then measured the physiological reactions (heart rate, sweating, goose bumps) of listeners.

Chill-provoking passages, they found, shared at least four features. They began softly and then suddenly became loud. They included an abrupt entrance of a new "voice," either a new instrument or harmony. And they often involved an expansion of the frequencies played. In one passage from Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 23 (K. 488), for instance, the violins jump up one octave to echo the melody. Finally, all the passages contained unexpected deviations in the melody or the harmony. Music is most likely to tingle the spine, in short, when it includes surprises in volume, timbre and harmonic pattern.

"Someone Like You" is a textbook example. "The song begins with a soft, repetitive pattern," said Dr. Guhn, while Adele keeps the notes within a narrow frequency range. The lyrics are wistful but restrained: "I heard that you're settled down, that you found a girl and you're married now." This all sets up a sentimental and melancholy mood.

When the chorus enters, Adele's voice jumps up an octave, and she belts out notes with increasing volume. The harmony shifts, and the lyrics become more dramatic: "Sometimes it lasts in love, but sometimes it hurts instead."

When the music suddenly breaks from its expected pattern, our sympathetic nervous system goes on high alert; our hearts race and we start to sweat. Depending on the context, we interpret this state of arousal as positive or negative, happy or sad.

If "Someone Like You" produces such intense sadness in listeners, why is it so popular? Last year, Robert Zatorre and his team of neuroscientists at McGill University reported that emotionally intense music releases dopamine in the pleasure and reward centers of the brain, similar to the effects of food, sex and drugs. This makes us feel good and motivates us to repeat the behavior.

Measuring listeners' responses, Dr. Zatorre's team found that the number of goose bumps observed correlated with the amount of dopamine released, even when the music was extremely sad. The results suggest that the more emotions a song provokes—whether depressing or uplifting—the more we crave the song.

With "Someone Like You," Adele and Mr. Wilson not only crafted a perfect tear-jerker but also stumbled upon a formula for commercial success: Unleash the tears and chills with small surprises, a smoky voice and soulful lyrics, and then sit back and let the dopamine keep us coming back for more.
—Ms. Doucleff is a scientific editor at the journal Cell.

Ivan
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Very interesting article Ivan

Knarle Tide

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Very interesting!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornament_%28music%29#Appoggiatura

With sample and reference to Adele.

Any surf music fitting these patterns? Just generally ...

This ...

An appoggiatura is a type of ornamental note that clashes with the melody just enough to create a dissonant sound. "This generates tension in the listener," said Martin Guhn, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia who co-wrote a 2007 study on the subject. "When the notes return to the anticipated melody, the tension resolves, and it feels good."

... sounds like a whammy bar in action.

While this ...

Chill-provoking passages, they found, shared at least four features. ... And they often involved an expansion of the frequencies played. In one passage from Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 23 (K. 488), for instance, the violins jump up one octave to echo the melody.

... this sounds like a description of a glissando. And listen to the Creation's Crash, which alternates regular and high passages.

I'm afraid that I don't find vibrato to perform the same function as an appoggiatura. The ornament is intended to introduce a suspension where the harmony does not have such a suspension (i.e. the underlying chord is not suspended, only the melody). It then resolves.

The vibrato used at the end of a surf phrase is most often a matter of emphasis of the end of the phrase, rather than a suspention tool.

I find that the octave jump bears more in common with the common surf device of restating the main riff up a fourth than glissando. It always sounds to me as if the glissando is used, like vibrato as a signifier that a phrase has ended, or is about to begin.

But it is so that tension and release, familiarity and novelty, wel-balanced are what makes tunes memorable.

Tuck wrote:

Any surf music fitting these patterns? Just generally ...

My music theory kung-fu is pretty weak, so I can't speak to whether or not this song actually fits the patterns described in the article (although I believe it does). But, "Peace Pipe" by The Shadows never fails to give me goosebumps (or at least more than the normal amount experienced when listening to a Shadows song). Smile

Great article, Ivan!

-murph

http://www.reverbnation.com/elmiragesurf
http://www.reverbnation.com/aminorconspiracy

"I knew I was in trouble when the Coco-Loco tasted like water!" -- morphball

For the first time ever, I'm using meh. That's my reaction to Adele and the music she sings. For your consideration I offer these two almost impossibly beautiful spine-chilling works of art. They aren't really my absolute favorite performances, but those aren't available. They're very close and they're very great though.

This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got.

Last edited: Mar 15, 2012 17:45:46

i watched adele's concert at the royal albert hall last night on youtube. i'm not a huge fan of female singing or ballad-esque tunes but i really like her voice and 'someone like you'.

www.surfintheeye.com

Sometime in the 1990s after MTV Europe went to Sky pay-tv, i started viewing a French music channel called (i think) M6. The French had some laws about how much foreign music could be aired on tv & radio, i'm not sure if this law still stands today though. About once an hour they would show a live video by Mylène Farmer and i'm pretty sure it was called "Ainsi Soit-Je". From my rather wobbly memory i'm sure i saw her cry and break down to her knees on stage, the camera pans to audience who are also in floods of tears. One of the most remarkable sights i've ever seen!
This video isn't what i remember but it will do.

and how does this differ from "Blue notes"?

Sound of the Surf, the movie
Facebook SOTS

Last edited: May 28, 2012 11:18:48

I alway thought blue notes were like between A & A# - like crazy jive man Big Grin
To be honest i don't really understand what these British boffins are on about. I just see Adele as a rather large fog horn, typical modern singer who has to sing scales in possible break - like vocal diarrhea - me me me never giving the band an opportunity. Moan winge Big Grin

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