T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2501.1 | Coming soon, watch this space, etc. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Tue Nov 27 1990 12:17 | 9 |
| re <<< Note 2501.0 by DECWIN::FISHER "I like my species the way it is" "A narrow view..." >>>
> -< Music OCR? >-
I have joked in this conference about such a device from time
to time - the only currently available implementation seems to be
appropriately trained humans; notoriously unreliable devices.
R
|
2501.2 | Rockin' Robot... | NIOMAX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*282-1476 | Tue Nov 27 1990 12:25 | 10 |
| There was an exhibit (Well, a video of an exhibit) at Boston's Museum
of Science a few years ago, showing a keyboard-playing robot, which
had a camera and did have music in front of it. I don't know for sure
if the robot read the music or not ... I seem to remember a narrative
saying that it did ... the actual exhibit was in Japan, I believe ...
The robot was playing what looked like a modern organ: 3 manuals plus
25 footpedals and expression pedals
-Jim
|
2501.3 | Robot | VICE::JANZEN | Tom MLO21-4/E10 223-5140 | Tue Nov 27 1990 12:44 | 3 |
| That robot is written up in Computer Music <journal. The robot's on the cover.
Maybe the MIT Press bookstore still has old copies.
Tom
|
2501.4 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I like my species the way it is" "A narrow view... | Tue Nov 27 1990 12:49 | 4 |
| Pity...It seems like it should be easy compared to reading text. The format
is much more consistent in music!
Burns
|
2501.5 | info in Japan | TKOV60::YAMAMOTO | | Wed Nov 28 1990 00:17 | 24 |
| Hello.This is my first reply in this conference.(Writing
in English is very hard for me...but I love COMMUSIC!)
I have some info for music OCR in Japan.
Do you know? In Japan,most major computer music product is
Roland's "MUSI-KUN",That's MT-32+Ballard Sequencer software
+MIDI interface board for PC-9801.(PC-9801 is maybe called
"APC4" in USA,simular IBM-PC but incompatible...Japanese local
major Personal computer.)
Roland sells optional product of MUSI-KUN, named "YOMITORI-KUN".
YOMITORI-KUN is music OCR software + handy scanner set.
YOMITORI-KUN scans score on paper media, and converts to MUSI-KUN
format sequence data file.
YOMITORI-KUN's price isn't so expensive,retail 48,000 yen (about 300$+).
but I hear that YOMITORI-KUN takes many misreading, and convert is
slow. My friends say,"I prefer training Key-input than buy YOMITORI-KUN!".
Music OCR is possible, but difficult to using.but someday It will come
useful OCR product.
DEC-Japan,Hidemi Yamamoto
|
2501.6 | There's an old scifi story about a robot-pianist... | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Wed Nov 28 1990 09:17 | 12 |
| Re -1: Your English is VERY good -- don't be shy anymore!
I've been longing for this product to appear. It seems like a mere
variant on the existing stuff for text, which is fairly cheap and quite
effective. The market is probably teeny, though, UNLESS someone makes
it into more of a consumer item. I'd like to be able to photocopy my
Beatles songbook, tape the music end-to-end like a piano roll, and feed
it to my MusicReader (tm) perched on top of the synth. Turning all the
world's MIDI keyboards into player pianos would be cool and financially
rewarding I betcha.
- Hoyt
|
2501.7 | 2 cents.. | SALISH::EVANS_BR | | Wed Dec 12 1990 17:29 | 16 |
| re: OCR music being easy...
Funny how when reading Finale documentation they point out that the
incredible variety of musical notation prevents straightforward
notation "rules" -- which makes me think OCRs might not be so "simple"
to produce.
As far as scanning the note heads and recognition of those, that's
pretty simple, but it's the dynamics that make any song into something
we want to listen to, and that's the notation part I'm thinking of
(above).
All this is neither here, nor there... I too would enjoy having this
tool around!!!
Bruce Evans
|
2501.8 | geez | KEYS::MOELLER | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be | Fri Dec 14 1990 12:06 | 11 |
| <<< Note 2501.7 by SALISH::EVANS_BR >>>
> As far as scanning the note heads and recognition of those, that's
> pretty simple, but it's the dynamics that make any song into something
> we want to listen to, and that's the notation part I'm thinking of
Bruce, *IF* I were more into classical, and there was an inexpensive
tool that would scan sheet music and put the time-stamped notes into a
MIDI sequence for me, I hardly would consider [putting in expression in
the form of vol/velocity and a tempo map] an onerous task.
karl
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2501.9 | Notation is idealized | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Fri Dec 14 1990 15:30 | 13 |
| Music notation doesn't tell you everything about how to play the piece
anyway. Even if you captured everything on the page, you still have to
program in, or add later by hand, all the little nuances of
performance.
Like playing the first beat of each measure a little louder.
For a fun time, take Tom's sequenced Beethoven. This was entered on a
notation editor and all the timing is perfect. A little too perfect.
If you play around with "humanization" it sounds much more life-like.
You don't notice it at first, but when I flip humanization on and off
during playback you can really hear it, and the "humanized" version
sounds more realistic.
|