What makes a melody catchy?

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Published 2022-07-22
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SOURCES:
Big Think, the science of music: Ā Ā Ā ā€¢Ā TheĀ scienceĀ ofĀ music:Ā WhyĀ yourĀ brainĀ ...Ā Ā 
Vulgarlang, Tonal Languages: Ā Ā Ā ā€¢Ā TonalĀ LanguagesĀ Ā 
Suisman, D. (2012) Selling Sounds: The Commercial Revolution in American Music

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0:00 Introduction
0:58 Ease of singing
3:09 Repetition
8:03 Why do tunes get stuck in our head at all?
9:43 writing a catchy

All Comments (21)
  • @Hawkkiwi
    "You're learning to speak Call Me Maybe" is an inspirational quote ngl
  • @ibji
    Only went to Disneyworld once. Every ride had a long line. Except for one. So we went on the "It's A Small World" ride. And we found out fairly quickly why no one went near it. That music was played loud, without a break, and there was no escape until the ride was over. It will scar you for life.
  • @bgmaraujo
    4:33 When he said "songs go far too far with repetition" I KNEW the example was gonna be Baby Shark.
  • I like how your "uncatchy" example at the end still sounded like a decent melody and wasn't just a random jumble of notes
  • 1:50 is one of the biggest earworms in existence, it`s catchy af actually hard to get rid of once it has worked it`s way into your brain may not be easy to sing, but you find yourself whistling like crazy
  • @dilemmacubing
    The most catchy melody is the friends we made along the way
  • @J-W_Grimbeek
    Man listening to someone talk about repetition I automatically hear the phrase "repetition legitimizes" in my head - repeatedly Edited to fix spelling mistakes
  • Instantly catchy melodies get old fast, the ones that take their time to dig in stay with you longer. Or is it just me?
  • I donā€™t think a melody has to be easily singable to be catchy. Both Mexican Hat Song and the intro to Clocks are extremely catchy in my opinion, and same could be said about many guitar or even piano riffs which are almost impossible to sing, and yet you will feel like singing them, even if you fail to do it in tune, over and over. Examples from the top of my head would be: - Sweet Child Oā€™ Mine opening riff - Hair Of The Dog by Nazareth (main riff) - The Maple Leaf Rag (piano piece) ā€œchorus?ā€ - Turkish March by Mozart (the ending sequence) - Con Te Partiro (super hard vocals) Letā€™s not forget that music (including melodies) isnā€™t only vocals.
  • @djvoid1
    My theory on why a lot of people complain about 'modern music' is that to them, it's catchy at the expense of all else. The music gets stuck in your head, yet gives no pleasure, and it seems to reveal a divide between people's tastes. For some people, catchy = good. For others, catchy without any further substance of enjoyment = some sort of deception has occured and left a feeling of being musically 'short changed' somehow upon listening. Like a cheat code was input to increase the significance and memorability of the song undeservedly
  • @tedl7538
    I'd also add two more elements to a catchy tune: 1) Groups of notes which clearly suggest a particular harmonic underpinning 2) Sequences of notes which clearly imply a consistent tonal center or key
  • @Jewpacca
    Besides the impeccable and efficient music education in all his videos, the fact that David keeps a totally straight face the entire time is the icing on the cake.
  • @jimbrentar
    funny. Mexican Hat Dance is extremely catchy. And "I Will Always Love You" has extremely drawn out notes
  • @Byron418
    IMHO the 'uncatchy' tune is a banger šŸ”„
  • @64ccd
    I watch so many of this type of video. Usually I'm left with the feeling of "You didn't really give me an answer to the question" or "That's the easy answer that everyone already knew", but here I feel I really learned something new and valuable, much thanks to you linking it to how our brains perceive language. Thank you!
  • I think it's theoretically possible for any song to get stuck in your head if you enjoy it enough. As you noted, Radiohead is not a band known for making catchy tunes, yet I get their songs stuck in my head on a regular basis, even the lesser known tracks. Another thing I noticed is that when a song is stuck in my head, it's usually just one lyric in particular and seldom the entire song. And if that lyric matches a repeating melody in the song, you end up repeating that lyric over and over again in your brain. Repetition legitimizes. Repetition legitimizes. Repetition legitimizes.
  • @frankvaleron
    You really have a great channel. May it continue to grow. Memes and bullshit will grab viewers, but you are completely correct to steer clear and keep going as you're going
  • @Von_D
    I usually don't like sponsorship ads, but I'm REEEEEEEEAAAALLY glad I didn't skip. I had been dying to get some instrumentals of my favourite songs, and I think this is the most painless way to go about it.
  • @syberyah
    9:10 definitely very true. My brother throws me off sometimes when he "hums" a "yes" or a "no," because we usually communicate "no" with an mm-mm, where both syllables start with guttural sounds, and it has a downward inflection; and we say "yes" with an mm-hmm, where only the first syllable starts with a guttural sound, and it has an upward inflection. But sometimes my brother will say "mm-mm" with an upward inflection or "mm-hmm" with a downward inflection and it confuses me, lol