By Tanya Lewis
Pawley and University of London music psychologist Daniel Müllensiefen later modeled the influence of both musical and contextual variables, hoping to discern some trends in singalong behavior.
A pub full of Brits singing lustily along to bands like Queen isn’t the most typical locale for research — unless the topic of study is what makes a song worthy of singing along to.
According to research presented July 27 at the International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition in Thessaloniki, Greece, anthem-like ballads with high-energy male singers best fit the bill. Queen’s “We are the Champions” topped the most sing-along-able list, followed by the Village People’s “Y.M.C.A.” Context, too, plays an important role: It helps when a crowd is full of strutting singles.
Leading the study was musicologist Alisun Pawley, previously a graduate student at the University of York, who spent 30 nights covertly observing crowds singing at pubs and nightclubs in five English cities. Whenever a round of song broke out, Pawley noted the fraction of people participating and the crowd’s size and average age. She witnessed over 1,000 episodes in total. A singer herself, she admitted to sometimes joining in.
A prominent feature among the songs was a male vocalist with a loud, clear high-chest voice, without many vocal embellishments. Pawley suggested that singing along to these songs promotes a kind of “neotribal bonding” among participants. As for why female vocalists’ songs weren’t popular, Pawley speculated that, whereas women will happily sing along to men, men may feel that voicing a woman’s words threatens their masculinity.
More important than a song’s musical characteristics, though, was the context in which it was played. The most favorable conditions for sing-alongs were bigger venues with younger crowds, especially on weekends. Not surprisingly, these are all conditions associated with an atmosphere of revelry. Younger people are also more likely to be single, and “when you’re single there’s an added goal” to singing, Pawley said. Most of the songs had been chart-toppers at some point, so familiarity was likely also a factor.
Some of the popular songs are specific to British audiences. ”It’s a completely different market from America,” said music industry blogger Bob Lefsetz. “It’s a different bar culture there to begin with.” But while the favorite American sing-along songs my differ from the British, Pawley thinks they’d probably have similar musical qualities to those she found.
Source: Weird Science Magazine
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