![]() |
|
|
Electronic equipment and computer software have been available for many years to record music in the form of a MIDI file so it could later be automatically converted into notation, played back using the sounds in your sound card or MIDI-enabled musical instruments, edited in a sequencer, or used on Web pages as a space-saving alternative to audio files. The catch is that the music has to be entered by hand or "played in" on a MIDI-enabled instrument, so you have to know how to play the song in order to create the MIDI file.
A few products have been recently developed that will allow you to sing or play a non-MIDI instrument, determine the notes you played, and write them to a MIDI file or control another instrument. The catch here, of course, is that these products can only recognize songs played monophonically -- one note at a time. That's fine if you sing solo or play an instrument one note at a time.
However, most prerecorded WAVE and MP3 music is polyphonic. Attempts have been made over the last 25 years to create an automatic music recognition system that recognizes polyphonic audio files, that is, music containing more than one note at a time, for example:
Unfortunately, this dream has proved to be elusive. If you wanted polyphonic WAVE, MP3, or CD files to be converted to MIDI, you simply had no alternative but to succumb to the often tedious and time-consuming task of picking out the notes yourself, time that could be better spent on more creative endeavors.
Intelliscore Main Features:
What's New:
Uses for intelliScore:
System Requirements:





Reviews & Questions
