Description
Guests/speakers
- Thierry Bertin-Mahieux, School of Engineering and Applied Science, Columbia University
- John Ashley Burgoyne, CIRMMT, Schulich School of Music, McGill University
- Julie Cumming, CIRMMT, Schulich School of Music, McGill University
- Michael Cuthbert, Music Program, MIT
- J. Stephen Downie, GSLIS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Ichiro Fujinaga, CIRMMT, Schulich School of Music, McGill University
- Frauke Jurgenson, Music, University of Aberdeen
- Ian Quinn, Music Department, Yale University
- George Tzanetakis, Computer Science Department, University of Victoria
- Christopher White, Music Department, Yale University
Schedule
13:30-13:45 Introduction
13:45-14:15 Frauke Jurgenson: Computer applications to questions of performance and compositional practice in Renaissance music
14:15-14:45 George Tzanetakis: Stacking for Music Tag Annotation
14:45-15:15 Michael Cuthbert: Research on Music Corpora with Music21: Completed Tasks and Future Applications
15:15-15:45 Thierry Bertin-Mahieux: What is a song, and how many do I have?
15:45-16:00 Ashley Burgoyne: SALAMI/Billboard groundtruth databases
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-16:55 Ian Quinn: Prototype of an Interactive Concordancer in Music21
16:55-17:10 Christopher White: Alphabet reduction with a Spellchecking Procedure
17:10-17:30 Ichiro Fujinaga: SIMSSA: Single Interface for Music Score Searching and Analysis
17:30-17:40 Julie Cumming: ELVIS: Electronic Locator of Vertical Interval Successions
17:40-18:00 General Discussion with J. Stephen Downie
18:00-20:00 Reception with Pizza
Registration
Registration is mandatory as seating is limited (25 seats): Workshop on processing large amounts of musical information - registration