This application is a utility conversion of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/045,186, filed Apr. 15, 2008, for “Server-Side Audio File Beat Mixing (SSAFBM).”
The present invention relates to a server-side audio file beat mixing.
A device for audio file beat mixing may include a website, a plurality of audio files, an audio processing server, audio mixing software (i.e., sound mixing engine), at least one audio processor and an audio encoder.
The website may be the front end of the invention where a client could create a mixed audio file including a custom play list of recordings that they desire to mix.
A database of mix-ready audio files (e.g., songs) is provided with corresponding Marker Time Stamp information—a collection of songs that have been tempo adjusted to one or more “base tempos.” Base tempos are starting tempos of songs that are to be mixed. For example, a client might choose 128 beats per minute (BPM). The mix would select from songs that have a base tempo of 128 BPM. As shown in
The audio processing server may include, for example, a computer server that processes the bit-by-bit mixing and processing of one song with another in a virtual multi-track environment. The audio processing server may also be used to convert the mixed audio file to a compressed format for delivery or pickup by a customer.
Mixing software may be used to combine the audio files (e.g., songs) and other sounds (Audio Bridge), apply audio processors, and convert the resulting file to new audio format.
Audio processors may be used to adjust a number of audio attributes including, but not limited to, amplitude (volume) of incoming signal, frequency response (EQ) of incoming signals, sound limiting or compression of the signal to reduce or eliminate distortion, phase shifters to remove any “phase cancellation” resulting from the exact placement of “similar beats over top of similar beats,” automated stereo panning envelopes adjusting the left-right stereo image of one or more separate stereo tracks to provide interesting special effects, and time compression or expansion algorithms may be employed to adjust the speed of the audio file on a fixed or gliding/gradual basis.
An MP3 encoder or other encoder may be used to convert the mixed audio file to a compressed audio format suitable for quick download by a user of the service.
Step 1: Project play list including at least one song is created and sent to mixing software to create a mixed audio file template.
Step 2: The mixer software compiles song-related data from the database (e.g., Time Stamps of Marker Points, total number of bits in a song) related to each song that is selected for mixing as part of the mixed audio file and translates this into an instruction list that is further processed by the software invention. Specifically, a map is created by creating a time line (in bits) of the entire audio file by adding length of Part 1 of first song to Part 2 of each subsequent song, followed by Part 3 of the last song on the mixed audio file to determine the overall bit length of the mixed audio file. Time Stamp Location points of each Mix Region, defined below, are stored on the server to be accessed during the mix process so that Audio Processes can be applied to the Mix Region real-time during the re-sampling process. A Mix Region is defined as the range of time in the time line where two songs are being combined to create a blended mix of two songs within a mixed audio file, similar to DJ mixing.
MIX REGION PROCESSING detailed: The mixer would set up a virtual multi-track workspace equal to the number of songs in a mixed audio file and the number of Audio Bridges required (
The Audio Bridge is simply a sound file that, when layered over the file at the end of a “Mix Region,” helps smooth out any noticeable or abrupt transitions from one Song to another, commonly experienced when two songs of different production style are mixed. An Audio Bridge would have one Marker of note, Marker X. Marker X is the ninth beat in a 16-count bridge, but since the audio bridge is often non-rhythmic, it can be of any length and the “X” position can be set by the peak in amplitude of the segment. The sound prior to the ninth beat or Marker X would normally increase in amplitude or volume while the sounds after the peak of the ninth beat or Marker X would normally decrease in volume to fade out by the end of the 16 count bridge, as shown in
Step 4: Once the entire mixed audio file has been processed or mixed, a Time Compression/Expansion process may be called to change the tempo of the mixed audio file from its base tempo (128 BPM) to any flat tempo or to a gliding tempo profile that can be selected during the mixed audio file creation process in Step 1. A mixed audio file can be gradually pitched up from the base tempo to a user-defined or static-option tempo higher or lower than the base tempo, or the entire mixed audio file could be shifted up or down in tempo entirely. This Step can also be accomplished during the real-time processing of the audio mixing.
Step 5: The mixed audio file may be converted to a new compressed format and posted for the customer to download.
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