Groovology
Encyclopedia
Groovology is the study of the aspect of music that brings out a physical, participatory response in its listeners. The word itself is derived from 'groove', an informal term for a rhythmic pattern in pop or jazz music, especially one that is perceived to be enjoyable. It has been characterized as 'the "make-you-dance" magic' of certain forms of music. Groovology is any form of study, whether musicological, ethnographic, psychological, or otherwise, which attempts to investigate the connection between the music itself and the physical participatory experience of its listeners, or alternatively between the physical movement of the musician and the physical movement of the audience.

Charles Keil writes:
The practical question is something like: what do we have to do with our bodies playing these instruments and singing in order to get their bodies moving, bobbing their heads, snapping their fingers, up from their tables and dancing? The mystery: how do people and musicking become consubstantial, a communion, communitas, a sacrament, the music inside the people and the people inside the music?


Applied Groovology is the attempt to teach or use "grooving" skills for developmental or therapeutic purposes.

Groovology has also been characterized as the study of Jazz and Latin grooves.

The word groovology is also used as a neologism in reference to informal or light-hearted investigations into groovy music. Examples include:
  • an album by Gerald Albright
    Gerald Albright
    Gerald Albright is an American jazz saxophonist.Albright has sold over 1,000,000 albums in the U.S. alone. His self-produced music features him on bass guitar, keyboards, flutes, drum programming, and background vocals.- Biography :...

  • Groovology.com - a personal blog
  • Recent Results in Groovology - a statistical investigation of pop music grooviness
  • numerous techno, hip-hop, and dance DJs, groups, and events
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