
Music Emotion Recognition (MER) is a task deeply connected to human perception, relying heavily on subjective annotations collected from contributors. Prior studies tend to focus on specific musical styles rather than incorporating a diverse range of genres, such as rock and classical, within a single framework. In this paper, we address the task of recognizing emotion from audio content by investigating five datasets with dimensional emotion annotations -- EmoMusic, DEAM, PMEmo, WTC, and WCMED -- which span various musical styles. We demonstrate the problem of out-of-distribution generalization in a systematic experiment. By closely looking at multiple data and feature sets, we provide insight into genre-emotion relationships in existing data and examine potential genre dominance and dataset biases in certain feature representations. Based on these experiments, we arrive at a simple yet effective framework that combines embeddings extracted from the Jukebox model with chroma features and demonstrate how, alongside a combination of several diverse training sets, this permits us to train models with substantially improved cross-dataset generalization capabilities.
Accepted at the 17th International Symposium on Computer Music Multidisciplinary Research (CMMR) 2025
Machine Learning, FOS: Computer and information sciences, Sound (cs.SD), Sound, Data distribution gap, Music emotion recognition, Emotion modeling, Machine Learning (cs.LG)
Machine Learning, FOS: Computer and information sciences, Sound (cs.SD), Sound, Data distribution gap, Music emotion recognition, Emotion modeling, Machine Learning (cs.LG)
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