Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet


What Is the Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet?

The Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet is a free, hands‑on guide that teaches you how to decompose any song into its frequency components using a Fourier transform. You’ll learn to see the hidden mathematical structure behind pop hits, using only free software (Sonic Visualiser and Audacity).

Created as a companion to the Statistical Analysis of Pop Hits explainer video, this worksheet bridges abstract algebra and modern music theory. It provides:

  • Step‑by‑step instructions for running Fourier analysis on any MP3
  • Real hit song statistics with practice problems
  • No coding required – just free downloadable tools

Download the full worksheet + hit song problem set at the bottom of this post.


Why You Need This Worksheet

1. See Music as Mathematics

A Fourier transform converts a sound wave (time domain) into a spectrum (frequency domain). This worksheet shows you exactly how to:

  • Plot a spectrogram to visualise frequency over time
  • Extract the strongest frequencies from a vocal or instrument
  • Compare the harmonic simplicity of a chorus vs. a verse

For a deeper dive into frequency ratios, check out The Algebra of Sound Waves Problem Set.

2. Predict What Makes a Hit Song

Researchers have found that chart‑topping songs share measurable traits: rhythmic periodicity, harmonic purity, and geometric symmetry. This worksheet teaches you to quantify those features using Fourier analysis.

You’ll also work through statistical practice problems based on real Spotify hit data – including BPM, energy, danceability, and valence.

For complementary material on decibels and pitch, see our Logarithmic Audio Problem Set.

3. No Programming Experience Needed

Unlike many data science tutorials, this worksheet uses point‑and‑click software. You’ll be running your first Fourier transform within 10 minutes.

For a geometric approach to harmony, explore the Tonnetz Lattice Worksheet.


What’s Inside the Worksheet?

The worksheet is divided into two main parts:

Part 1: Fourier Analysis in Practice – 5 Hands‑On Exercises

ExerciseToolWhat You Learn
1. View a SpectrogramSonic VisualiserVisualise frequency content over time
2. Plot a Frequency SpectrumAudacityFind the dominant pitch of any sound
3. Compare Two SectionsAudacityQuantify differences between verse and chorus
4. Automated Feature ExtractionSonic Visualiser + Vamp pluginsDetect BPM, beats, and chroma features
5. Phase Cancellation TestAudacitySee destructive interference in the frequency domain

Software needed: Sonic Visualiser (free) and Audacity (free). Both run on Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Part 2: Hit Song Statistics – 15 Practice Problems

Using real data from Spotify chart studies, you’ll solve problems like:

  • Comparing mean vs. median of hit song features (energy, danceability, valence)
  • Calculating intensity ratios from decibel changes over decades
  • Interpreting predictive model accuracy (97% hit prediction!)
  • Estimating spectral centroid from harmonic partials

A full answer key is included.


Preview: Two Sample Exercises

From Part 1 – Exercise 2: Plot a Frequency Spectrum

  1. Open Audacity and import any MP3.
  2. Select a short, steady portion (e.g., a held vocal note).
  3. Go to Analyze → Plot Spectrum.
  4. Move your cursor over the highest peak – read the exact frequency in Hz.
  5. Export the graph as a text file.

Journal question: What is the strongest frequency? Does it match the expected musical note? Are there clear harmonics at 2×, 3×, and 4× that frequency?

From Part 2 – Problem 7 (Predictive Models)

A 2024 study using Spotify’s U.S. Top 200 Daily Charts achieved 97% accuracy predicting chart success with Random Forest and XGBoost models.
If the model predicts 100 new songs, how many would it correctly classify?

(Answer: 97, provided in the key.)


How to Use This Worksheet

  1. Download the PDF using the link below.
  2. Install Sonic Visualiser and Audacity (free links provided inside).
  3. Grab any MP3 – your favourite pop song works perfectly.
  4. Follow the step‑by‑step instructions – each exercise takes 5–10 minutes.
  5. Complete the statistics problems to reinforce your learning.
  6. Check your answers against the included answer key.

For a broader introduction to sacred geometry in music, read our post: Sacred Geometry in Music: The Hidden Mathematics of Harmony.


Download the Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet

📥 Click here to download the Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet (PDF, Fourier guide + 15 problems + answer key)
File size: ~600 KB – Free for educational and non‑commercial use.

Also available in this series:


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to know how to code?

No. All exercises use free software with graphical interfaces. No programming required.

What audio files work?

Any MP3, WAV, or AIFF file. The worksheet includes tips for isolating clean sections (e.g., a single held note or drum hit).

Is this useful for physics exams?

Yes. Fourier transforms appear in A‑Level Physics, AP Physics 2 (waves and sound), and IB Physics HL. The worksheet builds intuition before tackling exam equations.

Can I use this for a science fair project?

Absolutely. The worksheet teaches you to measure harmonic simplicity, beat frequencies, and spectral centroids – all excellent project variables.

Is an answer key included?

Yes, a complete answer key with detailed solutions is provided at the end of the PDF.

How do I cite this resource?

Centre for Elites. (2026). Statistical Song Analysis Worksheet: Fourier Transform Guide & Hit Song Statistics. Retrieved from [your URL].


Final Thoughts

The Fourier transform is one of the most powerful tools for understanding sound – and it’s surprisingly accessible. This worksheet strips away the intimidating math and lets you see the frequency structure of any song you love.

Whether you’re preparing for a physics exam, producing your own music, or simply curious about why certain songs become hits, this worksheet gives you the hands‑on experience you need.

Download it, pick an MP3, and start seeing music as data.


Share this resource: Know a friend who loves music and math? Send them this link. For more interdisciplinary content, subscribe to our newsletter below.


All worksheets and problem sets are created by the Centre for Elites. Licensed under CC BY‑NC 4.0.

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