Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Štefunko, Adam, Hajič jr, Jan
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21822
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
_version_ 1866910160618782720
author Štefunko, Adam
Hajič jr, Jan
author_facet Štefunko, Adam
Hajič jr, Jan
contents A central part of the contemporary Historically Informed Practice movement is basso continuo, an improvised accompaniment genre with its traditions originating in the baroque era and actively practiced by many keyboard players nowadays. Although computational musicology has studied the theoretical foundations of basso continuo expressed by harmonic and voice-leading rules and constraints, characteristics of basso continuo as an active performing art have been largely overlooked mostly due to a lack of suitable performance data that could be empirically analyzed. This has changed with the introduction of The Aligned Continuo Realization Dataset (ACoRD) and the basso continuo realization-to-score alignment. Basso continuo playing is shaped by stylistic traditions coming from historical treatises, but it also may provide space for showcasing individual performance styles of its practitioners. In this paper, we attempt to explore the question of the presence of personal styles in the basso continuo realizations of players in the ACoRD dataset. We use a historically informed structured representation of basso continuo performance pitch content called griffs and Support Vector Machines to see whether it is possible to classify players based on their performances. The results show that we can identify players from their performances. In addition to the player classification problem, we discuss the elements that make up the individual styles of the players.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_21822
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Beyond Rules: Towards Basso Continuo Personal Style Identification
Štefunko, Adam
Hajič jr, Jan
Sound
J.5
A central part of the contemporary Historically Informed Practice movement is basso continuo, an improvised accompaniment genre with its traditions originating in the baroque era and actively practiced by many keyboard players nowadays. Although computational musicology has studied the theoretical foundations of basso continuo expressed by harmonic and voice-leading rules and constraints, characteristics of basso continuo as an active performing art have been largely overlooked mostly due to a lack of suitable performance data that could be empirically analyzed. This has changed with the introduction of The Aligned Continuo Realization Dataset (ACoRD) and the basso continuo realization-to-score alignment. Basso continuo playing is shaped by stylistic traditions coming from historical treatises, but it also may provide space for showcasing individual performance styles of its practitioners. In this paper, we attempt to explore the question of the presence of personal styles in the basso continuo realizations of players in the ACoRD dataset. We use a historically informed structured representation of basso continuo performance pitch content called griffs and Support Vector Machines to see whether it is possible to classify players based on their performances. The results show that we can identify players from their performances. In addition to the player classification problem, we discuss the elements that make up the individual styles of the players.
title Beyond Rules: Towards Basso Continuo Personal Style Identification
topic Sound
J.5
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21822