“…Many quantitative analyses in music have been carried out using different elements as building blocks, or "units of context", which allow the message of a musical piece to be apprehensible at different time scales [1]. Common choices for these "units of context" are single pitches (ignoring or taking into account the chroma properties [2,3]), single musical notes (i.e., pitch and rhythm values), pairs of pitches or musical intervals (either harmonic or melodic), triplets of pitches between contiguous notes, and chords [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]. In the case of musical intervals (from now on referred to as intervals), quantitative analyses frequently employ parameters that describe their psychoacoustic properties, such as the sizes of intervals (commonly measured in tones or semitones), the ratio of the fundamental frequencies of both pitches (commonly measured in units of cents), and the difference between the fundamental frequencies [10,11].…”