They Don’t Make Them Like They Used To! Song Melodies Have Become Simpler Over the Past 70 Years, Research Finds

You’re probably tired of hearing your parents claim that the old songs are the best.

But they might be right: research shows that song melodies have become simpler since the 1950s.

Researchers have found that the complexity of the melodies of the most popular songs in the US has declined over the past 70 years.

The team from Queen Mary University of London, analyzed the most prominent melodies (usually the vocal melody) of songs that reached the top five positions on the US year-end charts each year between 1950 and 2022.

They found that there were two significant decreases in melodic complexity in 1975 and 2000, with a smaller decrease in 1996.

Since the 1950s, music charts have become less melodically complex, researchers from Queen Mary University of London report

American Billboard Year-End Singles

  • 1964 – 1st – ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ (The Beatles), 2nd – ‘She Loves You’ (The Beatles)
  • 1975 – 1st – ‘Love Will Keep Us Together’ (Captain & Tennille), 2nd – ‘Rhinestone Cowboy’ (Glen Campbell)
  • 1996 – 1st – ‘Macarena’ (Los del Rio), 2nd – ‘One Sweet Day’ (Mariah Carey)
  • 2000 – 1st – ‘Breathe’ (Faith Hill), 2nd – ‘Smooth’ (Santana)
  • 2020 – 1st – ‘Blinding Lights’ (The Weeknd), 2nd – ‘Circles’ (Post Malone)

The change in melody in 1975 could be attributed to the rise of genres such as new wave, disco and stadium rock, they said.

The changes documented in 1996 and 2000 could represent the rise of hip hop or the introduction of digital audio workstations, which allowed for the repeated playback of audio loops.

When you compare some top melodies from different decades, the evolution of the song is clearly visible.

While the most popular song in 1964 was The Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” the equivalent in 1980 was Blondie’s “Call Me.”

The dance hit ‘Macarena’ from Los del Rio was the absolute favorite in 1996 and in 2003 the hip-hop hit ‘In Da Club’ by 50 Cent reached the first place.

While Adele’s power ballad “Rolling in the Deep” was the most popular hit of 2011, in 2021, Dua Lipa’s disco song “Levitating” took the top spot.

Analysis, published in the journal Scientific reportsIt also turned out that while the complexity of the rhythms and pitch arrangements decreased over the decades, the number of notes played per second increased.

And it could be that the increase in the use of digital instruments has allowed the complexity of music to be expressed through sound quality rather than melody, they added.

The study suggests that the Beatles offered a melodic complexity in their music that has since been lost. Pictured are the Beatles in January 1963, the year

The study suggests that the Beatles offered a melodic complexity in their music that has since been lost. Pictured are the Beatles in January 1963, the year “I Want to Hold Your Hand” was recorded and released. In the US, it topped the charts in February 1964.

“The dominant pattern emerging from these analyses shows decreasing complexity and increasing note density in popular melodies over time, particularly since 2000,” they wrote.

‘In the 1950s, the range of possible timbres for music production was limited to the sounds you could make with the physical instruments and accessories available at the time.

‘Today, anyone with a laptop and an internet connection can create any sound they can imagine, thanks to the accessibility of digital music production software and libraries of millions of samples and loops.’

Pop songs will become SHORTER in the future as young people’s attention span has declined by 33% since 2000, experts predict

According to experts, pop songs will become shorter on average by the end of this decade due to declining attention spans and the ‘skipping culture’ on streaming services.

Research by Samsung shows that the attention span of music lovers has dropped from twelve seconds to eight seconds since the year 2000.

That’s why it’s more important than ever for musicians to engage listeners early, keep the overall length of a song short, and “put choruses up front.”

On music streaming services like Spotify, artists don’t get royalties for a song played if the listener doesn’t make it past the first 30 seconds.

Experts say that by 2030, it will be more important than ever for songs to be able to quickly transition to the next track on an album before listeners get bored.

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