Dear MIRtoolbox users,
Please see below some information about the first MIRAGE Symposium, about
Computational Musicology, which will take place as a Zoom webinar on June 8-9
2021.
For your particular interest, at the end of the first day: Olivier Lartillot
and Petri Toiviainen will give their perspectives on the early development of
MIRtoolbox and provide an overview of how it has been used in research.
Concluding with a presentation of the current project: MIRtoolbox 2.0 and the
MiningSuite.
Best regards,
MIRAGE Symposium #1: Computational Musicology
The 1st MIRAGE Symposium will take place on 8-9 June, 2021, in the form of a
Zoom webinar, from 10AM to 6PM (CEST). It is organised in the context of the
MIRAGE project (RITMO, in collaboration with the National Library of Norway's
Digital Humanities Laboratory).
No need for registration. Link to the Zoom webinar will be added to the website.
https://www.uio.no/ritmo/english/projects/mirage/events/2021/symposium/index.html
<https://www.uio.no/ritmo/english/projects/mirage/events/2021/symposium/index.html>
Welcome!
Olivier
Symposium program
During the first day (June 8):
• David Meredith will give a talk about music analysis, pattern
discovery, complexity and information.
• The current developments of the MIRAGE project will be presented.
• Automated transcription and music analysis of Norwegian
traditional Hardanger fiddle tunes
• Musical introduction to Hardanger fiddle (Olav
Luksengård Mjelva)
• Archiving representations of a folk music tradition
in sound and notation (Hans-Hinrich Thedens)
• Polyphonic transcription and generation of annotated
datasets using score alignment (Anders Elowsson)
• Representing meter in traditional fiddle music:
Accounting for variability and ambiguities (Mats Sigvard Johansson)
• Metrical and structural analysis (Olivier Lartillot)
• Meter and periodic body motions in Norwegian
Telespringar performance (Mari Romarheim Haugen)
• Exploring Hardanger fiddle performance patterns
through interactive tools (Aleksander Tidemann)
• A new software for computer-assisted annotation of music
recordings, with a focus on transcription (OL, AE, OLM)
• Dynamics analysis, and application to a comparative study of
Bruckner performances (OL, Erling E. Guldbrandsen, Carlos Eduardo
Cancino-Chacón (Con Espressione project))
• Analysis of sound objects (Rolf Inge Godøy, OL)
• Mathieu Giraud will give an overview of his Algomus team’s research
on the analysis of patterns, harmony, rhythm, texture, and forms such as
fugues, variations, and sonata.
• Olivier Lartillot and Petri Toiviainen will give their perspectives
on the early development of MIRtoolbox and provide an overview of how it has
been used in research. Concluding with a presentation of the current project:
MIRtoolbox 2.0 and the MiningSuite.
During the second day (June 9):
• Research projects in the topic of computational musicology will be
presented: (with the name of confirmed presenters)
• TROMPA: Towards Richer Online Music Public-domain Archives
(Emilia Gomez)
• Transforming Musicology (Tim Crawford)
• Polifonia: a digital harmoniser for musical heritage
knowledge (Simon Holland,Paul Mulholland, Enrico Daga)
• Dutch-Song-Database-related projects (Frans Wiering, Anja
Volk)
• Jazz-related projects Jazzomat and Dig That Lick (Martin
Pfleiderer, Simon Dixon, Klaus Frieler)
• CompMusic: Computational models for the discovery of the
World’s Music (Xavier Serra)
• This will be followed by a panel session, and a general discussion on
the topic of New Perspectives for Musicology
Symposium website:
https://www.uio.no/ritmo/english/projects/mirage/events/2021/symposium/index.html
<https://www.uio.no/ritmo/english/projects/mirage/events/2021/symposium/index.html>