B3 Non-refereed conference proceedings
Songs Perceived as Relaxing : Musical Features, Lyrics, and Contributing Mechanisms (2020)


Baltazar, M., & Västfjäll, D. (2020). Songs Perceived as Relaxing : Musical Features, Lyrics, and Contributing Mechanisms. In B. Bogunović, & S. Nikolić (Eds.), PAM-IE 2019 : Proceedings of the First International Conference : Psychology and Music – Interdisciplinary Encounters (pp. 115-124). Faculty of Music, University of Arts in Belgrade. http://www.fmu.bg.ac.rs/dokumentacija/elektronske_publikacije/Psychology%20and%20Music%20-%20Proceedings%20sa%20koricama.pdf


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsBaltazar, Margarida; Västfjäll, Daniel

Parent publicationPAM-IE 2019 : Proceedings of the First International Conference : Psychology and Music – Interdisciplinary Encounters

Parent publication editorsBogunović, Blanka; Nikolić, Sanela

Conference:

  • International Conference: Psychology and Music – Interdisciplinary Encounters

Place and date of conferenceBelgrade, Serbia24.-26.2019

ISBN978-86-81340-20-2

Publication year2020

Pages range115-124

Number of pages in the book264

PublisherFaculty of Music, University of Arts in Belgrade

Place of PublicationBelgrade

Publication countrySerbia

Publication languageEnglish

Persistent website addresshttp://www.fmu.bg.ac.rs/dokumentacija/elektronske_publikacije/Psychology%20and%20Music%20-%20Proceedings%20sa%20koricama.pdf

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/72760


Abstract

How we listen to music has been changing rapidly in the last years, with online streaming becoming more predominant. Besides the gain in accessibility for the listeners, the growth of online services also affords easier access to data for musical analyses. A growing body of research has been showing that daily life music listening serves varied functions, from affect regulation to social bonding. More specifically, the reduction of stress responses is quite pertinent in the contemporary world, and recent studies have high-lighted the importance of adequate musical choices. This study aimed to identify the characteristics of music that individuals perceive as favorable to relax and to compare it to the music perceived as unfa-vorable to relax. Furthermore, the study intended to explore the possibilities offered by the application programming interfaces (API) of services such as the music streaming Spotify and the lyrics database genius as sources for future work. Answers were collected through an online survey, where the participants provided examples of music tracks (favorable and unfavorable to relaxation). They also rated the contribution of several musical mechanisms to the (in)efficacy of the examples. Musical features were pulled from the Spotify API and the lyrics were retrieved from the genius API through the R package spotifyr and then analyzed. The discriminant functions for musical features and perceived mechanisms (Wilks’ lambda: .611, χ2(20) = 257.57, p < .001) and for all the variables when lyrics were present (Wilks’ lambda: .555, χ2(26) = 202.80, p < .001) were statis-tically significant. Relaxing and non-relaxing music was successfully distinguished by perceived mechanisms, Spotify features, and two variables related to lyrics. The largest contributors for the discriminant function were the mechanisms aesthetic value, genre/preference, and familiarity, following by the Spotify features energy and loudness.


Keywordsmusic psychologyemotionsrelaxationcompositions (music)lyricsgenres

Free keywordsemotional regulation; features; genius.com; musical mechanisms; Spotify


Contributing organizations


Ministry reportingYes

Reporting Year2020


Last updated on 2024-03-04 at 20:55