'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass

While the artistic hymns of J. S. Bach have often been the subject of digital analysis, the large corpus of Choralbücher with “everyday settings” still lacks this kind of acknowledgement. The similarities of these settings, however, allow assumptions about a “harmonic standard” of hymns. From the Re...

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Main Authors: Kirsten Gerhardt, Matthias Kirsch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2024-12-01
Series:Transactions of the International Society for Music Information Retrieval
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Online Access:https://account.transactions.ismir.net/index.php/up-j-tismir/article/view/191
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author Kirsten Gerhardt
Matthias Kirsch
author_facet Kirsten Gerhardt
Matthias Kirsch
author_sort Kirsten Gerhardt
collection DOAJ
description While the artistic hymns of J. S. Bach have often been the subject of digital analysis, the large corpus of Choralbücher with “everyday settings” still lacks this kind of acknowledgement. The similarities of these settings, however, allow assumptions about a “harmonic standard” of hymns. From the Reformation until around 1800, a core stock of around 100 hymn melodies had developed, which remained relatively stable in the repertoire for many decades thereafter, while their harmonized versions were always based on common contemporary procedures. In terms of compositional technique, hymn arrangements can therefore be seen as a genre that reacts to contemporary tonal differentiations and “records” them in a certain way. Analysing the similarities or differences in this large corpus is only possible by reading the data digitally. The dataset described in this article therefore includes four Choralbücher with “everyday settings,” that were transcribed with a focus on digital processing, especially on a digital analysis of the figured bass. All four books are Choralbücher of the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, published between 1755 and 1832. The transcriptions and a few sample queries can be found on GitHub: Transcriptions: https://github.com/Chorale-Corpus. Queries: https://github.com/cau-mi/musicau-demo.
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series Transactions of the International Society for Music Information Retrieval
spelling doaj-art-7067dcde495e4b0485c237aa3f08bc7c2025-01-08T08:41:56ZengUbiquity PressTransactions of the International Society for Music Information Retrieval2514-32982024-12-0171306–315306–31510.5334/tismir.191191'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured BassKirsten Gerhardt0Matthias Kirsch1Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu KielChristian-Albrechts-Universität zu KielWhile the artistic hymns of J. S. Bach have often been the subject of digital analysis, the large corpus of Choralbücher with “everyday settings” still lacks this kind of acknowledgement. The similarities of these settings, however, allow assumptions about a “harmonic standard” of hymns. From the Reformation until around 1800, a core stock of around 100 hymn melodies had developed, which remained relatively stable in the repertoire for many decades thereafter, while their harmonized versions were always based on common contemporary procedures. In terms of compositional technique, hymn arrangements can therefore be seen as a genre that reacts to contemporary tonal differentiations and “records” them in a certain way. Analysing the similarities or differences in this large corpus is only possible by reading the data digitally. The dataset described in this article therefore includes four Choralbücher with “everyday settings,” that were transcribed with a focus on digital processing, especially on a digital analysis of the figured bass. All four books are Choralbücher of the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, published between 1755 and 1832. The transcriptions and a few sample queries can be found on GitHub: Transcriptions: https://github.com/Chorale-Corpus. Queries: https://github.com/cau-mi/musicau-demo.https://account.transactions.ismir.net/index.php/up-j-tismir/article/view/191choralbücherchorale bookshymnsmir data setcomputational musicologyfigured bass
spellingShingle Kirsten Gerhardt
Matthias Kirsch
'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
Transactions of the International Society for Music Information Retrieval
choralbücher
chorale books
hymns
mir data set
computational musicology
figured bass
title 'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
title_full 'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
title_fullStr 'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
title_full_unstemmed 'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
title_short 'Choralbücher' from Northern Germany 'c'. 1800 – a Dataset for Studies in Hymnology, Music Culture and Figured Bass
title_sort choralbucher from northern germany c 1800 a dataset for studies in hymnology music culture and figured bass
topic choralbücher
chorale books
hymns
mir data set
computational musicology
figured bass
url https://account.transactions.ismir.net/index.php/up-j-tismir/article/view/191
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