A recent fascinating NPR article highlighted the research of Glenn Schellenberg of the University of Toronto, where he studies the psychology of music.
The idea behind Schellenberg’s initial experiment was pretty straightforward: he simply wanted to play music for people and get them to rate how happy or sad that music made them feel.
Through music, the emotions of happiness and sadness are relatively easy to identify. Schellenberg says the tempo of a song and whether it’s in a major or minor key often strongly influences which emotion the song conveys.
“Happy-sounding songs typically tend to be in a major key, and they tend to be fast, [with] more beats per minute,” he says. “Conversely, sad-sounding songs tend to be slow in tempo, and they also tend to be in a minor key.”
The grad student had no trouble finding fast, happy-sounding music in a major key when he looked at older musical eras — from the classical period up through the 1960s — but it got a lot harder when it came to contemporary pop music.
Had there been some kind of shift, Schellenberg wondered, in the emotional content of music since the 1960s? How had the psychology of our music changed?
To find the answer, Schellenberg did a totally different study. He analyzed more than 1,000 songs — every Top 40 hit from 1965 to 2009 — in terms of tempo and whether the song was in a major or minor key.
His findings? “All [Top 40 songs] published by Billboard [in 1965], every single one was a major-key song,” Schellenberg says. But through the 1980s and ’90s, the dominance of the major key in the Top 40 began to shift, slowly at first and then quite radically: “By 2009,” Schellenberg says, “only 18 out of [the Top] 40 [songs] were a major key.”
As an example, take a look at the music video below:
Click here to view the embedded video.
According to Schellenberg’s study, in the latter half of the last decade, there were more than twice as many hit songs in a minor key as there were in the latter half of the 1960s.
“People are responding positively to music that has these characteristics that are associated with negative emotions,” he says.
As an example, take a look at the music video below:
Click here to view the embedded video.
The question, of course, is why? Why would consumers connect more to conflict and sadness now than they did in the ’60s and ’70s?
Schellenberg says he doesn’t think it’s because people today are any sadder.
“I think that people like to think that they’re smart,” he says. “And unambiguously happy-sounding music has become, over time, to sound more like a cliche. If you think of children’s music like ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’ or ‘The Wheels on the Bus,’ those are all fast and major, and so there’s a sense in which unambiguously happy-sounding songs sound childish to contemporary ears. I think there’s a sense in which something that sounds purely happy, in particular, has a connotation of naivete.”
If you use a minor key, though, you can make even something with a positive message and fast tempo sound emotionally complicated.
“It’s more emotionally complex in the sense that it’s expressing both sadness in terms of one dimension and happiness in terms of another dimension at the same time,” Schellenberg says.
That complexity makes both listeners and composers feel sophisticated instead of naive. In that way, Schellenberg says, the emotion of unambiguous happiness is less socially acceptable than it used to be. It’s too Brady Bunch, not enough Modern Family.
“People have come to appreciate sadness and ambiguity more,” Schellenberg says. “Life is more complicated, and they want the things that they consume as pleasure to be complex similarly.”
To hear the complete NPR interview, please click on the link below:
All things considered-Why we’re happy being sad: Pop’s emotional evolution