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New Musical Resonance, Via Your Cell Phone


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Philadelphia Orchestra

Philadelphia Orchestra musicians and board members have tested the Drexel University system that displays information about an orchestral performance on an iPhone.

Credit: The Philadelphia Orchestra Association

Drexel University researchers have developed software that listens to a live orchestral performance and then displays real-time information describing the relevant music theory and context on an iPhone.

The program works by taking snapshots of the music every third of a second. Each segment of the audio signal is analyzed to determine how much of each of the 12 pitch classes is present. The system must learn a piece of music first by listening to a reference recording, and then, during any subsequent performance of the same music, the software matches the new performance to the reference version using a process called dynamic time-warping. "It's the process of trying to stretch or shrink one audio source into another," says Drexel professor Youngmoo Kim.

The program also includes a map to indicate where the orchestra is in the performance, similar to a map displayed on the screens during a long airplane flight.

From The Philadelphia Inquirer
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Abstracts Copyright © 2010 Information Inc., Bethesda, Maryland, USA


 

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