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Data from "Hamilton: An American Musical", formatted for reuse. See below for some interesting text analysis basic findings! I am not throwing away my stopword?

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ham4corpus

The #ham4corpus repo currently contains files with various types of information about the Original Broadway Cast recording of Hamilton: An American Musical (i.e. all words currently in the show, minus the one scene not on the OBC recording).

Suggested uses: Twitter bots, text visualization.

All lyrics are by Lin-Manuel Miranda and copied from the LMM-annotated Genius.com hosting of the lyrics. Cast/character information is from Wikipedia. Links to all sources listed below.

For example:

Using Stéfan Sinclair and Geoffrey Rockwell's Voyant Tools to explore the text of the musical, I discovered the following about the Hamilton lyrics en masse (in order as one text block, with no names of speakers/singers interspersed):

  • 21,351 total words and 2,939 unique word forms
  • Interesting frequent words: da (103 times, thanks George III), time (87), hamilton appears the same number of times wait does (79), room (71), burr (69), sir (56), satisfied (37), story (35), helpless (32).
  • Unsurprisingly, "sir" is the most frequent one-away collocate of "burr" (9 times).
  • Single word occurrence via microsearch (map of where a given word appears throughout the lyrics):

Screenshot of Voyant microsearch for occurences of the word "wait" throughout the Hamilton lyrics Red = the word "wait" vs the rest of the lyrics (the second-to-last red block is Burr's final "Wait!", last one is Eliza's "I can't wait to see you again")

Screenshot of Voyant microsearch for occurences of the word "Hamilton" throughout the Hamilton lyrics Red = the word "Hamilton" vs the rest of the lyrics (was surprised that the word "Hamilton" isn't used again after Burr's last "The world was wide enough for both Hamilton and me")

Explore the Voyant dashboards for both versions of the lyrics yourself at:

The files

Lyrics, including character names before their parts

Title: All_Hamilton_Lyrics_Speakers

What: One file containing all lyrics sung in the Original Broadway Cast recording of Hamilton, with the name of the character singing each part appearing on the line above the beginning of their part. No empty lines between anything, just a solid block of Hamilton. Copied and pasted from the lyrics on Genius.com; the placement of simultaneous lyrics is broken up rather than side-by-side.

Pulled from: http://genius.com/albums/Lin-manuel-miranda/Hamilton-original-broadway-cast-recording

Lyrics, not including character names before their parts

Title: All_Hamilton_Lyrics_No_Speakers

What: One file containing all lyrics sung in the Original Broadway Cast recording of Hamilton. No empty lines between anything, just a solid block of Hamilton. Copied and pasted from the lyrics on Genius.com; the placement of simultaneous lyrics is broken up rather than side-by-side.

Pulled from: http://genius.com/albums/Lin-manuel-miranda/Hamilton-original-broadway-cast-recording

Original Broadway Cast Actors & Character Names

Title: OBC_Cast_Actors_Character.json

What: Actors and the named characters played by them in the Original Broadway Cast recording of Hamilton. Actors who played multiple characters are listed multiple times.

Pulled from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton_(musical)#Principal_roles_and_major_casts

How

I wish I could say my Python is non-rusty enough that I scraped Genius.com and Wikipedia to get this data, but it isn't and I was on hold on the phone, so I just cut and pasted everything into a text document and grepped:

^\s*?\r to remove blank lines

[.* to remove the [character names]

If you'd like to learn more about doing cool digital things with text, check out The Programming Historian for novice-friendly, peer-reviewed lessons on data cleaning, distant reading, web scraping, and Python.

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Data from "Hamilton: An American Musical", formatted for reuse. See below for some interesting text analysis basic findings! I am not throwing away my stopword?

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