Concert to be Performed from Beyond the Grave 196
rtphokie writes "Raleigh, NC based Zenph Studios is hosting a live concert performed by two piano virtuosi long since dead. Zenph developed software which digitally transcribes performances even from the scratchy recordings. A more faithful transcription of timing, key and pedal pressure is achieved using Yamaha's high resolution version of MIDI."
elvis (Score:1, Funny)
Here comes elvis next.
Re:elvis (Score:5, Funny)
Re:elvis (Score:1, Funny)
Elvis? Don't we have some internet radio stations that play Elvis all the time?
That's good enough.
Coming soon, Just need an Electronic Hip Swiveler? (Score:2)
hmmmmm
Brandon Heat (Score:2)
Holograms (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Holograms (Score:3, Funny)
Then you'll have to make a moral decision: Endure the wisecracking hologram as a poorly-needed comedic relief, or shut off the power and kill the poor dude.
Re:Holograms (Score:5, Funny)
Frankly, I don't care if it is very good or not. If they don't stick to the standard of emblazaning an H on his forhead, I'm going to nitpick!
Re:Holograms (Score:2)
Comments like this let me know I am not the only loon in the universe
Re:Holograms (Score:2)
I'm actually shocked that made it to +5. I thought it was a little too obscure!
Re:Holograms (Score:2)
Not sure if ya know this or not, but you can buy seasons 1-6 on DVD at Best Buy. Just 10 minutes ago I was watching Gunmen of the Apocolypse. The extras aren't bad either, quite a few deleted scenes etc!
Meh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Meh (Score:2)
I went forward in time and took this photo at the gig!
Rock on! [completerunning.com]
Re:Meh (Score:2, Funny)
Side Note (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Side Note (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder how many bitter-beer-faces that little typo caused.
Not dead yet (Score:3)
Re:Not dead yet (Score:5, Funny)
Damn, that must really hurt.
Re:Not dead yet (Score:2, Funny)
Just a tad misleading... (Score:2, Interesting)
We're talking about a slightly more modern idea of the old player pianos. Stuff that matters indeed..
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:4, Informative)
The piano is just the thing they play it on, no one's saying that's a great achievement - MIDI enabled pianos have existed for years.
The achievement is being able to accurately translate a recording into MIDI instructions.
Whether or not it's as good as they claim is yet to be seen.
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:5, Informative)
Someone takes a recording from long ago on vinyl. They play it on vinyl. Advanced signal processing listens to the sound from the original recording and detects which note is played when keys are pressed and lifted, and apparently when pedals are in use as well. This is laid down in a high-fidelity MIDI format. This MIDI file is fed through a high-performance Yamaha piano and the concert is played live on the piano in the concert hall. The piano translates the MIDI files and hits the keys, pedals, everything to the exact timing specified in the file. The magic is in the signal processing of the original recording. The idea is to replicate the original recording, note for note, tone for tone, microsecond for microsecond, feeling for feeling.
So, this is a HUGE step beyond player pianos. We can replicate old recordings and (GASP!) re-record them using modern methods, saving old lost tapes, making old recordings available in SACD and DVD-Audio. We can replicate concerts across the globe. Piano competitions can be done remotely. This could be of incredible significance to old classical music libraries and performances.
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:5, Informative)
Extracting a usable midi file from a recording is very sophisticated signal processing. If the pedal is down a new attack can get lost among the wash of notes. The musical score would help if the program knew what notes to expect. Even so, I suspect they chose Glenn Gould because he was very sparing with the pedal when he played Bach.
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Player Pianos and Joplin (Score:2)
Player pianos could only record which notes were pressed and for how long. They couldn't reproduce the dynamics of the piece. MIDI is a huge step forward because you can r
Re:Player Pianos and Joplin (Score:2)
And, while its true that a MIDI recording is not 100% true to the source, its also true that an audio recording is not 100% true. a lot of the dynamics and spatial acoustic information are lost in a stereo rendering due to microphone placement, compression, etc. -- one could argue that playback on a disklavier is better in at least some
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Naturally, all with brand spanking new COPYRIGHTS on them that are so durable that they will last and last.
Any bets on which lasts longer - the Eveready Bunny, or modern copyrights...
Hey Yamaha, make me proud, put them under a copyleft or in the public domain. (If they are there now that is.)
all the best,
drew
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:3, Insightful)
the score doesn't indicate with that much precision how the notes are supposed to be played- it'll give the rhythms, general tempo and volume changes, but it's the subtleties that make it difficult. a good pianist is one who reads the music and interprets it with the appropriate feeling, which often means playing notes behind/ahead of the beat, playi
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Yes, if you record MIDI of the human playing it, it'll be the same (although standard MIDI may not have quite the resolution to fool a discerning ear as far as t
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
I have the feeling you have some serious reading comprehension problems. The statement above contradicts itself entirely.
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
I even have this fancy software (not sure if it's still published) called 'Desktop Sheet Music' published by Midisoft. It lets you enter the score, completely and 100% accurately, and then it's played back EXACTLY how the composer intended
sure sounds to me like he did. maybe he meant playing it into the program w/a MIDI controller, but that was not inferred. in any case, if you just enter the sheet music, it's not going to sound E
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
The only instrument this could be strictly true for is an electric action organ. MIDI doesn't have enough information for the piano.
MIDI doesn't know if you let a piano key up slowly, causing a moment of fuzz when the felt damper touches the string.
MIDI doesn't know if you re-strike a key with
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2, Insightful)
The software scans the exact performance (to a certain precision), not the original "sheet". The original sheet is an inaccurate representation of the composers idea.
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2)
Please tell me you're not serious.
No composer intends for a performer to interpret their music mechanically.
Music ebbs and flows; that's what makes it human. Mechanical reproductions are utterly flat in comparison with a human performance.
Notes are only a means for
Re:Just a tad misleading... (Score:2, Insightful)
Wow. This has got to be one of the most uninformed and/or naive posts regarding music I have read in a long time. Musical notation is quite imprecise. Modern composers have been in fact often struggling to find out how to translate their musical ideas into sheet music
Re:Won't take into account piano tuning (Score:2)
sounds like he really *did* take a sledgehammer to the thing!
btw; if you use a synth on a computer its pretty easy to retune MIDI into just intonation or whatever.
I used to think about the possibility of a disklavier that could retune itself automatically. Theoretically it should work... but it might not be good for the strings / frame, etc, and the piano tunerss society would probably lobby Santorum to sponser a bill to make it illegal.
Re:Won't take into account piano tuning (Score:3, Informative)
Fans of "Donald Duck in Mathmagic Land" know that a "perfect fifth" interval has two notes, with a 3:2 ratio of frequencies. 1.5000000000000. And a major fourth interval has frequencies with a 4:3 ratio. 1.3333333333333....
Intro to music theory (or a little piano experience) notes that an octave is a doubling in frequency, and contains 12 half steps. A major fourth is five half steps, and a perfect fifth is seven. From an octave (2:1), one can compute the fre
"High-def" MIDI? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:4, Informative)
There are a few MIDI things related to volume -
Channel volume and Key velocity are the most common used.
Volume just being the output volume.
Velocity is usually used to affect both volume and timbre.
There's also Chanel aftertouch and Key aftertouch, which depending on the instrument may affect volume, timbre, pitch, or nothing at all.
Controller 11 - Expression is often volume related, and there's also the Breath controler (I don't know the number off the top of my head) which can also be used to affect volume and / or timbre, pitch or whatever...
There's plenty of room in standard MIDI for a wide range of expressiveness, it's usually the instrument that falls short, not the protocol.
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:2, Informative)
That's incorrect. Velocity is sent as part of a Note On [borg.com] event in General MIDI 1.
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:2, Informative)
"Lo-def"MIDI would include keystrokes with their velocity, key releases, and when the pedal is engaged and released. I believe Yamaha's hi-def MIDI treats the pedals as continuous controllers so every move can be accurately recorded. They probably log the pressure and speed of release of the keys as well, though this would have o
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:2)
a
Re:"High-def" MIDI? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
PR junk (Score:1)
Can you guess the 3 experts and who payed for this one?
And by the way: who want's to ear this old gizzers, anyway?
Not the same (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not the same (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not the same (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not the same (Score:2, Insightful)
> in steaming hot water to loosen them
> and increase the circulation.
He most likely had a repetitive strain injury (RSI) from his piano playing, and this was how he reduced the pain. That his arms came out burnt red may indicate the level of pain he felt.
Rumor has it... (Score:3, Funny)
They're creepy and they're kooky,
Mysterious and spooky,
They're all together ooky,
The Addams Family.
da da da da. tum tum.
Re:Rumor has it... (Score:1)
transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:1, Interesting)
Zenph Studios, a software company based in Raleigh, North Carolina, claims that it has found a solution to the problem, although it refuses to say how for commercial reasons.
By taking the musical score into account?
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:3, Interesting)
You have the exact musical score, and that as a first-guess MIDI file should be pretty good (but will lack "feeling")... then you have an algorithm (genetic algorithm maybe?) that varies the exact timing and release of keys and stuff, until it best approximates the original recording. Since you're starting with the real musical score, getting the notes right shouldn't be the hard part... the rest of it should be the hard part.
In fact, you can
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:2)
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:2)
Re:transcribing polyphonic notes (Score:2)
Pragmatic Programmer article on the company (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.pragmaticprogrammer.com/articles/zenph/ index.html [pragmaticprogrammer.com]
Re:Pragmatic Programmer article on the company (Score:2)
This is an excellent article.
Chip H.
This was done 12 years ago with Gershwin (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This was done 12 years ago with Gershwin (Score:2)
Re:This was done 12 years ago with Gershwin (Score:4, Interesting)
That project was similar, but it's not quite the same thing. The Gershwin recordings were done using player piano rolls recorded by Gershwin himself - i.e.: his performances were already in a MIDI-like format - whereas this project is starting from the raw audio recordings of Gould and Cortot and creating MIDI files. In both cases the "concert" featuring dead performers' MIDI files is the headline grabbing story.
Re:This was done 12 years ago with Gershwin (Score:2)
I caught this concert with the Yamaha player-less piano together with the local symphony and it was uncanny.
And now all we need... (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately, he's spending a year dead for tax purposes, but hey, we can't but hope, eh?
Play it backwards (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Play it backwards (Score:2)
(With apologies to Monty Python and their "Decomposing Composers")
polyphony (Score:5, Insightful)
There have been attempts at music transcription software since the 1970's. For some obscure reason, many of the people who tried didn't seem to think of the fact that classical music comes with a score.
So, the "solution" to the problem is simple: use the known score to get the notes and polyphony, and use the recording primarily to infer the performance parameters. It's not a very complicated problem, actually. I suspect the main reason why you haven't seen this before is because it is of fairly little commercial interest.
Re:polyphony (Score:3, Interesting)
Stuff that matters, like cash (Score:3, Insightful)
FYI: the Yamaha XP Midi format and virtuosism (Score:3, Informative)
I can't find a technical spec on this right now, but its mostly backwards-compatible with MIDI plus the addition of a few extra details about the piano performance, e.g. key stroke depth, using the MIDI controller extensions. (However I'd be really suprised if it it was actually possible to determine key stroke depth from signal analysis of an old recording).
If they did their homework it would should also have a higher clockrate. MIDI is notorious for its poor time resolution with a clock of only 1khz -- and studies have shown that virtuoso pianists can control timing down to the sub msec range, so this is essential.
The article also beats around the bush on the polyphonic transcription issue -- but since these are classical pieces, score following seems like an obvious if not relatively easy way to do it.
Re:FYI: the Yamaha XP Midi format and virtuosism (Score:2)
Thus, (hex) 80 6c 3c would mean 'note on, channel 0' 'key 6c' 'velocity 3c'. When the command is not repeated fo
Re:FYI: the Yamaha XP Midi format and virtuosism (Score:2)
yeath that is pretty much what I was getting at... thanks for the detailed explaination though, very informative.
Re:FYI: the Yamaha XP Midi format and virtuosism (Score:2, Interesting)
Virtuoso pianists (typically having 15-20 years of formal training starting at age 2-4 years) have exceptional control of microtiming.
Non-virtuosos are very sloppy when it comes to timing. Non-musicians are even worse. Each category is like an order-of-magnitude difference.
There are plenty of virtuoso pianists who are totally dead in the "emotion" department.
One step further (Score:2)
Re:One step further (Score:2)
Software to make midi from singing or humming? (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
My thoughts (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the huge benefits I see is that now electronic music artists can incorporate classical pieces as done by the actual artist instead of a poor transcription. I don't know if anyone has heard tracks such as Gotti's Revenge, but I find that electronic music that integrates classical or otherwise note heavy songs has a much better sound.
the technology, or something similar (Score:4, Interesting)
The way the technology was described to me was as follows: as you know a piano works by having a small hammer attached to each key. The recording technology has a modified piano where below each hammer is a pool of mercury. When the key is struck the hammer enters the pool, completing an electrical circuit, this causes a line to be drawn (???) on a piece of paper. Another modified piano will read the piece of paper like a player piano.
We listened to music performed by Richard Strauss. It was very cool.
PR Stunt (Score:2)
MIDI compared to the real thing (Score:2)
Unfortunately the you need Real Player to listen to the files.
Re:MIDI compared to the real thing (Score:2)
Machines to record key strokes from organs existed around 100 years before that.
No news here folks!
Re:MIDI compared to the real thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Not possible (Score:2, Insightful)
Hardly a new thing at all (Score:2)
minor corrections and comments (Score:2, Informative)
For all of you who has reservations about the results, i suggest that you come and hear the demo. This is not about getting a piece of music performed the way a composer wants it performed. It is also not about taking an old recording and "cleaning it up". What this technology will do, is completely recreat
Re:What a concert (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What's more amazing... (Score:2)
Re:Other ways... (Score:2)
if you want to go look for it at a store, I think it was called "Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff- the Ampico Piano Player rolls" on Decca- but I may be way wrong on that.