Analyzable music data [on hold]
What Happens when Passenger Refuses to Fly Boeing 737 Max?
Aliens englobed the Solar System: will we notice?
Compression function is not collision resistant but Merkle-Damgard is collision resistant
What does C-53 signify?
PTIJ: How can I halachically kill a vampire?
How do you like my writing?
Do f-stop and exposure time perfectly cancel?
How to to redirect a form to a certain node for anonymous users?
Is there any way to click on 6th item of this list
Do I really need to have a scientific explanation for my premise?
Single word request: Harming the benefactor
Should QA ask requirements to developers?
Do any of the books contain (magic) items for animal companions?
Does "variables should live in the smallest scope as possible" include the case "variables should not exist if possible"?
How can I get players to stop ignoring or overlooking the plot hooks I'm giving them?
Leftbar without indentation
Making a sword in the stone, in a medieval world without magic
Distinction between apt-cache and dpkg -l
When traveling to Europe from North America, do I need to purchase a different power strip?
Can I withdraw from one conference and attend another one with the same abstract?
Why is there a voltage between the mains ground and my radiator?
What to do when during a meeting client people start to fight (even physically) with each others?
Is "history" a male-biased word ("his+story")?
How to create a hard link to an inode (ext4)?
Analyzable music data [on hold]
I would like to investigate the musical intervals between consecutive notes in various classical excerpts. For example, which composers make their music using relatively larger intervals, etc.
I think a good starting point is using musicXML files. However, the file itself contains too much information such as page margins and stem direction of notes.
Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?
I don't know whether this question is most suitable for this or another stackexchange website.
musicxml
put on hold as off-topic by David Bowling, Tim H, ttw, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ 49 mins ago
- This question does not appear to be about music practice, performance, composition, technique, theory, or history within the scope defined in the help center.
|
show 7 more comments
I would like to investigate the musical intervals between consecutive notes in various classical excerpts. For example, which composers make their music using relatively larger intervals, etc.
I think a good starting point is using musicXML files. However, the file itself contains too much information such as page margins and stem direction of notes.
Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?
I don't know whether this question is most suitable for this or another stackexchange website.
musicxml
put on hold as off-topic by David Bowling, Tim H, ttw, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ 49 mins ago
- This question does not appear to be about music practice, performance, composition, technique, theory, or history within the scope defined in the help center.
1
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
4
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
3
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
2
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
1
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago
|
show 7 more comments
I would like to investigate the musical intervals between consecutive notes in various classical excerpts. For example, which composers make their music using relatively larger intervals, etc.
I think a good starting point is using musicXML files. However, the file itself contains too much information such as page margins and stem direction of notes.
Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?
I don't know whether this question is most suitable for this or another stackexchange website.
musicxml
I would like to investigate the musical intervals between consecutive notes in various classical excerpts. For example, which composers make their music using relatively larger intervals, etc.
I think a good starting point is using musicXML files. However, the file itself contains too much information such as page margins and stem direction of notes.
Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?
I don't know whether this question is most suitable for this or another stackexchange website.
musicxml
musicxml
asked 3 hours ago
ThePortakalThePortakal
239311
239311
put on hold as off-topic by David Bowling, Tim H, ttw, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ 49 mins ago
- This question does not appear to be about music practice, performance, composition, technique, theory, or history within the scope defined in the help center.
put on hold as off-topic by David Bowling, Tim H, ttw, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ 49 mins ago
- This question does not appear to be about music practice, performance, composition, technique, theory, or history within the scope defined in the help center.
1
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
4
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
3
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
2
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
1
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago
|
show 7 more comments
1
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
4
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
3
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
2
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
1
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago
1
1
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
4
4
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
3
3
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
2
2
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
1
1
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago
|
show 7 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Well if you intend to use programming language then "too much information" in xml file shouldn't be a problem. You can write a script that will pick from xml file only the nodes you're interested in.
If you use python then try libraries like mingus for analysing the intervals:
https://github.com/bspaans/python-mingus
add a comment |
MusicXML files contain page layout information. To strip it down to just note data use MIDI files. If you have the programming skills to analyse intervals, you shouldn't have any trouble parsing a MIDI file.
Any score editor that reads MusicXML will do the conversion to MIDI for you. Including the free Muse Score.
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Well if you intend to use programming language then "too much information" in xml file shouldn't be a problem. You can write a script that will pick from xml file only the nodes you're interested in.
If you use python then try libraries like mingus for analysing the intervals:
https://github.com/bspaans/python-mingus
add a comment |
Well if you intend to use programming language then "too much information" in xml file shouldn't be a problem. You can write a script that will pick from xml file only the nodes you're interested in.
If you use python then try libraries like mingus for analysing the intervals:
https://github.com/bspaans/python-mingus
add a comment |
Well if you intend to use programming language then "too much information" in xml file shouldn't be a problem. You can write a script that will pick from xml file only the nodes you're interested in.
If you use python then try libraries like mingus for analysing the intervals:
https://github.com/bspaans/python-mingus
Well if you intend to use programming language then "too much information" in xml file shouldn't be a problem. You can write a script that will pick from xml file only the nodes you're interested in.
If you use python then try libraries like mingus for analysing the intervals:
https://github.com/bspaans/python-mingus
answered 2 hours ago
Jarek.DJarek.D
6627
6627
add a comment |
add a comment |
MusicXML files contain page layout information. To strip it down to just note data use MIDI files. If you have the programming skills to analyse intervals, you shouldn't have any trouble parsing a MIDI file.
Any score editor that reads MusicXML will do the conversion to MIDI for you. Including the free Muse Score.
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
add a comment |
MusicXML files contain page layout information. To strip it down to just note data use MIDI files. If you have the programming skills to analyse intervals, you shouldn't have any trouble parsing a MIDI file.
Any score editor that reads MusicXML will do the conversion to MIDI for you. Including the free Muse Score.
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
add a comment |
MusicXML files contain page layout information. To strip it down to just note data use MIDI files. If you have the programming skills to analyse intervals, you shouldn't have any trouble parsing a MIDI file.
Any score editor that reads MusicXML will do the conversion to MIDI for you. Including the free Muse Score.
MusicXML files contain page layout information. To strip it down to just note data use MIDI files. If you have the programming skills to analyse intervals, you shouldn't have any trouble parsing a MIDI file.
Any score editor that reads MusicXML will do the conversion to MIDI for you. Including the free Muse Score.
edited 53 mins ago
answered 2 hours ago
Laurence PayneLaurence Payne
35.9k1669
35.9k1669
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
I also think midi files would fit better for this purpose. But the XML files can be transformed into midis aswell.
– Albrecht Hügli
1 hour ago
add a comment |
-musicxml
1
Interesting, but I doubt any useful revelations will be uncovered.
– Tim
2 hours ago
4
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's more about information parsing than about music theory or practice.
– Tim H
2 hours ago
3
@topomorto The question seems to be asking for an algorithm. To me it reads, “how do I parse XML?” Doesn’t seem to be about music at all, and parsing XML doesn’t strike me as very different when it’s MusicXML.
– Todd Wilcox
1 hour ago
2
@topomorto -- I have voted to close as "too broad". As I said in my earlier comment, I think that "Is there any way I can analyze the notes and intervals with MATLAB or Python (programming)?" is just way too broad. It would also be too broad at Stack Overflow. If this is a request for a library recommendation, that would also be off-topic here and at Stack Overflow.
– David Bowling
1 hour ago
1
More detail as to what the problem actually is would be good - so 'Too broad' at least seems more appropriate than 'Off topic'.
– topo morto
58 mins ago