Scarlet & Grey
Ohio State University
School of Music


Richard Parncutt

Notes by Bret Aarden


Music 829
February 14, 2002

Richard Parncutt. (1989). Harmony: A Psychoacoustical Approach. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

Parncutt proposed a model of harmony perception based on Terhardt's theory thaat tonal meaning derives from psychoacoustic processes involved in the perception of "virtual pitch." Whereas Terhardt's musical concerns were mostly with chord roots, Parncutt wants to extend the theory to explain successions of chords in terms of the smoothness of motion between virtual pitches. A model is proposed with free parameters corresponding to listening strategies. Experiments are conducted to estimate reasonable values for these parameters. Finally, the model is tested on several theoretical and applied cases, and found to make sensible and interesting predictions about sonorities and chord progressions.

I. Background.

Whereas Rameau focused on physical properties of resonating bodies, Terhardt focused on the familiarity of the auditory system with the sound of resonating bodies. This consitituted a shift from physics to perception.

II. Psychoacoustics.

Spectral pitch is the pitch of a pure tone sensation. Virtual pitch is the pitch of a complex tone sensation, and is normally ambiguous. A virtual pitch results from the spontaneous recognition of the familiar pattern of spectral pitches of a harmonic complex tone.

III. Psychomusicology.

IV. Model.

V. Experiments.

VI. Aplications.



This document is available at http://dactyl.som.ohio-state.edu/Music829E/Notes/Parncutt.html