[OC] Billboard's top 10 singles are getting progressively more negative (and less acoustic) over time
Submitted by robert_ritz t3_yjvwiz in dataisbeautiful
Reply to comment by EldraziKlap in [OC] Billboard's top 10 singles are getting progressively more negative (and less acoustic) over time by robert_ritz
Spotify defines it as the likelihood that a track is acoustic on a scale from 0-1. You could interpret this as how acoustic sounding a track is.
This is a machine-made metric, though, and you can take it with a grain of salt if you wish. Docs on these are here.
Thanks for the response. I moreso wonder what in that case Spotify defines as acoustic, and what it considers non-acoustic music.
My guess is that there is no "definition" and that a machine learning model was trained using songs labeled as "acoustic". This is probably the result of either some database Spotify pulls from or the artists themselves.
Probably, yeah.
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Whew! Finally!
Thanks.
I would assume it's just a degree of how much sound amplification/modulation and/or manipulation is made to the acoustic instrument or the recordings of it. Mind you, you don't even need to "record" if the original sound is made digitally/electronically which I guess can be considered non-acoustic or at least a very low degree of acoustic-sounding.
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