Matrix (music)
In music, especially folk and popular music, a matrix is an element of variations which does not change. The term was derived from use in musical writings and from Arthur Koestler's The Act of Creation, who defines creativity as the bisociation of two sets of ideas or matrices. Musical matrices may be combined in any number, usually more than two, and may be — and must be for analysis — broken down into smaller ones. They are not necessarily intended by the composer or perceived by the listener, and they may be purposefully ambiguous.
The simplest examples given by van der Merwe are fixed notes, definite intervals, and regular beats, while the most complex given are the Baroque fugue, Classical tonality, and Romantic chromaticism. The following examples are some matrices which are part of "Pop Goes the Weasel":
- major mode
- time
- four-bar phrasing
- regular beat
- rhyming tune structure
- ending both halves of the tune with the same figure
- melodic climax
- perfect cadence
- three primary triads implied