Table of Contents
Fetching ...

Assessing the Impact of Sampling, Remixes, and Covers on Original Song Popularity

Guilherme Soares S. dos Santos, Flavio Figueiredo

Abstract

Music digitalization has introduced new forms of composition known as "musical borrowings", where composers use elements of existing songs -- such as melodies, lyrics, or beats -- to create new songs. Using Who Sampled data and Google Trends, we examine how the popularity of a borrowing song affects the original. Employing Regression Discontinuity Design (RDD) for short-term effects and Granger Causality for long-term impacts, we find evidence of causal popularity boosts in some cases. Borrowee songs can revive interest in older tracks, underscoring economic dynamics that may support fairer compensation in the music industry.

Assessing the Impact of Sampling, Remixes, and Covers on Original Song Popularity

Abstract

Music digitalization has introduced new forms of composition known as "musical borrowings", where composers use elements of existing songs -- such as melodies, lyrics, or beats -- to create new songs. Using Who Sampled data and Google Trends, we examine how the popularity of a borrowing song affects the original. Employing Regression Discontinuity Design (RDD) for short-term effects and Granger Causality for long-term impacts, we find evidence of causal popularity boosts in some cases. Borrowee songs can revive interest in older tracks, underscoring economic dynamics that may support fairer compensation in the music industry.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 7 sections, 1 equation, 4 figures.

Figures (4)

  • Figure 1: Search Interest Over Time for "Shots" (LMFAO) and "Somebody" (Natalie La Rose). The release month is the shaded region.
  • Figure 2: Distribution of the log-transformed average treatment effect (ATE) for the 82 statistically significant musical borrowings.
  • Figure 3: ATE Examples
  • Figure :