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The arrow of time across five centuries of classical music

The concept of time series irreversibility -- the degree by which the statistics of signals are not invariant under time reversal -- naturally appears in non-equilibrium physics in stationary systems which operate away from equilibrium and produce entropy. This concept has not been explored to date in the realm of musical scores as these are typically short sequences whose time reversibility estimation could suffer from strong finite size effects which preclude interpretability. Here we show that the so-called Horizontal Visibility Graph method -- which recently was shown to quantify such statistical property even in non-stationary signals -- is a method that can estimate time reversibility of short symbolic sequences, thus unlocking the possibility of exploring such properties in the context of musical compositions. Accordingly, we analyse over 8000 musical pieces ranging from the Renaissance to the early Modern period and certify that, indeed, most of them display clear signatures of time irreversibility. Since by construction stochastic processes with a linear correlation structure (such as 1/f noise) are time reversible, we conclude that musical compositions have a considerably richer structure, that goes beyond the traditional properties retrieved by the power spectrum or similar approaches. We also show that musical compositions display strong signs of nonlinear correlations, that nonlinearity is correlated to irreversibility, and that these are also related to asymmetries in the abundance of musical intervals, which we associate to the narrative underpinning a musical composition. These findings provide tools for the study of musical periods and composers, as well as criteria related to music appreciation and cognition.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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