Music

Your musical tastes are harder to classify than you think

People who like the same genre can have very different tastes when it comes to sub-genres, study finds

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 28 Aug 2023 7:00PM

Your musical tastes are harder to classify than you think
A German study shows that fans of the same musical style are not a homogeneous group. – ETX Daily Up pic, August 28, 2023

ROCK, hip-hop, techno, jazz... labelling by genre is commonplace for describing music. And yet while styles and genres play a vital role in the economics of the music industry for identification and promotion, they don't always sit right with fans. According to a recent study, music listeners often fail to recognise their tastes in these types of classifications.

The study in question was conducted by Anne Siebrasse and Melanie Wald-Fuhrmann, two researchers at Germany's Max Planck Research Institute in Frankfurt, and published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology. It seeks to determine how music fans perceive genres and, above all, whether they identify their tastes with them.

To this end, the scientists devised a questionnaire to assess the tastes of 2,086 German music lovers for sub-genres associated with five major musical styles, namely European classical music, electronic dance music (EDM), metal, pop and rock.

This approach highlighted the different attitudes of respondents to the notion of genres and, in particular, musical sub-genres. Indeed, analysis of the questionnaires revealed the existence of four to six distinct "taste classes" among aficionados of European classical music, EDM, metal, pop and rock. Three of these classes liked all the sub-genres associated with the particular musical style to roughly the same degree (very much, moderately or rather less).

The other taste classes differed in their liking or disliking of sub-genres, either easier or harder to process. "Our analyses revealed that people who like the same genre can have very different tastes if asked which sub-genres they like," said Anne Siebrasse in a statement.

The results of this study show just to what extent fans of the same musical style should not be perceived as a homogeneous group. They also highlight the importance of socio-demographic factors such as age, gender or education, and personality traits in predicting music preferences. For example, there is an "obvious" correlation between the age of pop fans and the pop songs they like. They tend to prefer those released when they were in their 20s.

While concepts of genre and style are now part of the common musical vocabulary, they don't really capture the diversity of everyone's musical tastes. "When people talk about their musical tastes, they often use genre terms. However... [while] Beatles and Rolling Stones fans would all be rock fans ... they themselves would probably see huge differences [between them]," Anne Siebrasse points out. – ETX Daily Up, August 28, 2023

Related News

Community / 1mth

Penang to study needs of elderly population to better understand their needs

Malaysia / 2mth

Students in Beluran study under tents, on sidewalks: PM directs MOE, ICU to find immediate solution

Music / 8mth

Penang-born pianist makes finals of world-renowned Chopin competition in Poland

Malaysia / 1y

NUBE: No reason why study needed to abolish RM1 withdrawal fee

Malaysia / 1y

Conduct study on abolishment of RM1 interbank withdrawal fee, says deputy finance minister

Malaysia / 1y

Experts from the British Museum invited to do in depth studies on Sarawak’s artefacts

Spotlight

Malaysia

BN mulls seat swaps in Negeri Sembilan as Tok Mat pushes for election reset

Malaysia

Panther spotted along highway near Tasik Kenyir (video)

Malaysia

Kedah ruler calls for review of Penang lease payments, says current rate no longer reflects fair value

Opinion

When institutions rewrite the rules, we should all be concerned

By Vinod Sekhar

Malaysia

Admission of international students in public universities does not sideline locals – MOHE

Sports & Fitness

Messi reclaims outright lead in ferocious World Cup golden boot race

Malaysia

The hate economy: When division becomes a business model

Malaysia

Driver without licence leads police on 20km chase near Rembau (video)

Malaysia

Puad Zarkashi publicly supports PH candidate in Rengit