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#1
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"geoff" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I and a few of my musician friends can recognize a song from just the first three or four notes. Occasionally I can from the first fraction of a second. There is no reason why a computer couldn't do the same thing, but with more accuracy. The problem is, getting those few notes into the machine. A lot of people can't read music, so you would have to give the computer the ability to translate from a whistle or something to a score, or, give it a variety of ways to input the music. Audio isn't a score. You'd need to deconstruct the audio into frequencies, turn that into a scored arrangement, and then compare. Could be done, but rather hugely complicated methinks. Not quite as simple as Gracenote. geoff Yes. People like you and me, with good musical memories, usually are lousy at remembering the words, or the titles. I have been known to whistle a common tune for days without being able to come up with the name, and when I finally find someone who knows its name, it is a very common tune that I have known since grammar school some 65 years ago. But computers have a difficult time with music. Try to find a good program (for example) that can import a photo of a score, in JPG or PDF format, into a music notation program, or a MIDI file. The ones that I have tried are very poor at it, and require so mush clean-up work that you are almost better off entering the music note by note yourself. Especially if you are trying to enter piano scores with multiple voicing's. There are programs that will generate scores directly from the played music, but these tend to over exactly notate the timing, and give you a score full of dotted 32nd notes and the like, in an attempt to get the timing right.....They make for a very messy document that is virtually impossible to read. |
#2
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I and a few of my musician friends can recognize
a song from just the first three or four notes. Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. |
#3
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On 15 феб, 15:36, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote: I and a few of my musician friends can recognize a song from just the first three or four notes. Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. If I remember correctly, on facebook, ther's a quizz (I did not take) to name The Beatless song from 1 note. Worst results were like 17 out of 20. |
#4
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If I remember correctly, on facebook, ther's a quizz
(I did not take) to name The Beatless song from 1 note. That's an odd way of describing their music. Most of their songs had a pretty good beat. |
#5
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On 15 феб, 20:46, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote: If I remember correctly, on facebook, ther's a quizz (I did not take) to name The Beatless song from 1 note. That's an odd way of describing their music. Most of their songs had a pretty good beat. Presumably that one note is sample from originial recording, opening chord, or similar. I don't know really. |
#6
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"William Sommerwerck" wrote:
Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. Some people can make do with visual- rather than aural clues: I recall a classical music quiz show years ago on the BBC, where one regular feature was the contestants having to identify a piano work that was played silently atop the closed keyboard lid. Some incredibly quick and correct identifications..and also a quick mic set-up for the crew :-). -- Tom McCreadie "Music is the greatest silent force in the world" - Lionel Richie, mtv |
#7
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
I and a few of my musician friends can recognize a song from just the first three or four notes. Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. I would recognize the tune immediately, from a minimum of notes, but wouldn't be able to recall the name, so I would come in last. Unless they changed the rules to allow me to whistle or play on my horn the rest of the song. In that case, I would have a half-assed chance of winning the game..... |
#8
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Luxey wrote:
On 15 феб, 15:36, "William Sommerwerck" wrote: I and a few of my musician friends can recognize a song from just the first three or four notes. Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. If I remember correctly, on facebook, ther's a quizz (I did not take) to name The Beatless song from 1 note. Worst results were like 17 out of 20. 1 note ain't enough. All songs start with 1 note..... |
#9
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Bill Graham wrote:
Luxey wrote: On 15 феб, 15:36, "William Sommerwerck" wrote: I and a few of my musician friends can recognize a song from just the first three or four notes. Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. If I remember correctly, on facebook, ther's a quizz (I did not take) to name The Beatless song from 1 note. Worst results were like 17 out of 20. 1 note ain't enough. All songs start with 1 note..... If you restrict it to the Beatles, which the quiz quoted as doing, then it can be done. You'e choosing from a much smaller list, and they had a habit of making a distinctive hook as the first note/chord. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#10
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Tom McCreadie wrote:
"William Sommerwerck" wrote: Some songs can be recognized from just two notes. "Name That Tune" had a game in which the contenstants would bid on how few notes they needed to name a tune to which a clue had been given. Some people can make do with visual- rather than aural clues: I recall a classical music quiz show years ago on the BBC, where one regular feature was the contestants having to identify a piano work that was played silently atop the closed keyboard lid. Some incredibly quick and correct identifications..and also a quick mic set-up for the crew :-). Setting up invisible mic +56.7% as pr. screen and movie techie union rates O;-) Kind regards Peter Larsen |
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