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The So Strangely Podcast
Finn Upham
15 episodes
9 months ago
Investigating the how and why of recent research in interdisciplinary Music Science by interviewing researchers from two angles: inside and outside of their area. Every episode, an expert shares their recommendation for a recent publication and we call up the PI to discuss how the research went and what the results mean for music and science. Note: This podcast is tailored for people into music and science, academics and students in the field rather than the general public.
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Life Sciences
Music,
Music Commentary,
Science,
Social Sciences
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All content for The So Strangely Podcast is the property of Finn Upham and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Investigating the how and why of recent research in interdisciplinary Music Science by interviewing researchers from two angles: inside and outside of their area. Every episode, an expert shares their recommendation for a recent publication and we call up the PI to discuss how the research went and what the results mean for music and science. Note: This podcast is tailored for people into music and science, academics and students in the field rather than the general public.
Show more...
Life Sciences
Music,
Music Commentary,
Science,
Social Sciences
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts125/v4/ab/20/97/ab20972c-083a-e3f9-bc60-6337b7e22ba6/mza_14012574947028183839.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Music Transformer and Machine Learning for Composition with Dr. Anna Huang
The So Strangely Podcast
54 minutes 21 seconds
6 years ago
Music Transformer and Machine Learning for Composition with Dr. Anna Huang

Finn interviews Composer and Machine Learning specialist Dr. Cheng-Zhi Anna Huang about the Music Transformer project at Google’s Magenta Labs. They discuss representations of music for machine learning, algorithmic music generation as a compositional aid, the JS Bach Google Doodle, how self-reference defines structure in music, and compare the musicality of different systems with example outputs.



Time Stamps




* [0:01:05] Introducing Dr. Anna Huang



* [0:03:43] JS Bach Google Doodle



* [0:12:52] Representations of musical information for machine learning



* [0:16:26] Music Transformer project

* [0:25:15] RNN algorithm music sample





* [0:25:45] ABA structure challenge for generative systems

* [0:30:30] Vanilla Transformer algorithm music sample 



* [0:32:07] Music Transformer algorithm music sample 





* [0:36:30] Self Reference Visualisation (see blog post)



* [0:43:27] Everyday music implications



* [0:48:10] What this work says about music

* [0:50:01] Music Transformer trained on Jazz Piano 






Show notes




* Recommended project:

* Blog post: Huang, C.Z.A., Simon, I., & Dinculescu, M. (2018, Dec 12). Music Transformer: Generating Music with Long-Term Structure [Blog Post]



* Paper: Huang, C.Z.A., Vaswani, A., Uszkoreit, J., Shazeer, N., Simon, I., Hawthorne, C., Dai, A.M., Hoffman, M.D., Dinculescu, M., & Eck, D. (2018) MUSIC TRANSFORMER: GENERATING MUSIC WITH LONG-TERM STRUCTURE on arXiv.org





* Interviewee:  Dr. Cheng-Zhi Huang at Google AI, on twitter @huangcza



* Google Doodle Celebrating JS Bach with AI harmonising melodies



* Related papers:

* Huang, C.Z.A., Cooijmans, T., Roberts, A., Courville, A., Eck, D. (2017). Coconet: Counterpoint by Convolution. ISMIR.



* Huang, C.Z.A., Cooijmans, T., Dinculescu, M., Roberts, A., & Hawthorne, C. (2019, Mar 20). Coconet: the ML model behind today’s Bach Doodle.



* Huang, C.Z.A., Hawthorne, C., Roberts, A., Dinculescu, M., Wexler, J., Hong, L., Howcroft, J. (2019). The Bach Doodle: Approachable music composition with machine learning at scale. ISMIR.






Credits



The So Strangely Podcast is produced by Finn Upham, 2018. Algorithmic music samples from the blog post Music Transformer: Generating Music with Long-Term Structure, and included under the principles of fair dealing. The closing music includes a sample of Diana Deutsch’s Speech-Song Illusion sound demo 1.
The So Strangely Podcast
Investigating the how and why of recent research in interdisciplinary Music Science by interviewing researchers from two angles: inside and outside of their area. Every episode, an expert shares their recommendation for a recent publication and we call up the PI to discuss how the research went and what the results mean for music and science. Note: This podcast is tailored for people into music and science, academics and students in the field rather than the general public.