1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to musical instruments and, in particular, to techniques suitable for use in portable device hosted implementations of musical instruments for capture and rendering of musical performances with game-play features.
2. Related Art
The proliferation of mobile, indeed social, music technology presents opportunities for increasingly sophisticated, yet widely deployable, tools for musical composition and performance. See generally, L. Gaye, L. E. Holmquist, F. Behrendt, and A. Tanaka, “Mobile music technology: Report on an emerging community” in Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression, pages 22-25, Paris, France (2006); see also, G. Wang, G. Essl, and H. Penttinen, “Do Mobile Phones Dream of Electric Orchestras?” in Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, Belfast (2008). Indeed, applications such as Smule Ocarina™, Leaf Trombone®, I Am T-Pain™, Glee Karaoke and Magic Piano® available from Smule, Inc. have shown that advanced digital acoustic techniques may be delivered on iPhone®, iPad®, iPod Touch® and other iOS® devices in ways that provide users and listeners alike with compelling musical experiences.
As mobile music technology matures and as new social networking and monetization paradigms emerge, improved techniques and solutions are desired that build on well understood musical interaction paradigms but unlock new opportunities for musical composition, performance and collaboration amongst a new generation of artists using a new generation of audiovisual capable devices and compute platforms.
Despite practical limitations imposed by mobile device platforms and applications, truly captivating musical instruments may be synthesized in ways that allow musically expressive performances to be captured and rendered in real-time. In some cases, synthetic musical instruments can provide a game, grading or instructional mode in which one or more qualities of a user's performance are assessed relative to a musical score. By constantly adapting to such modes to actual performance characteristics and, in some cases, to the level of a given user musician's skill, user interactions with synthetic musical instruments can be made more engaging and may capture user interest over generally longer periods of time. Indeed, as economics of application software markets (at least those for portable handheld device type software popularized by Apple's iTunes Store for Apps and the Google Play! Android marketplace) transition from initial purchase price revenue models to longer term and recurring monetization strategies, such as through in-app purchases, user and group affinity characterization and social networking ties, importance of long term user engagement with an application or suite is increasing.
To those ends, techniques have been developed to tailor and adapt the user musician experience and to maintain long term engagement with apps and app suites. Some of those techniques can be realized in synthetic musical instrument implementations in which performance adaptive score tempos are supported. In some cases, continuous adaptation the tempo at which note and chord sequences of a computer readable musical score are presented to a user musician based a level of musical skill observable by the synthetic musical instrument or related computational facilities. In this way, amateur and expert users can be provided with very different, but appropriately engaging, user experiences. Similarly, a given user's experience can be adapted as the user's skill level improves.
More specifically, aspects of these performance- and/or skill-adaptive techniques have been concretely realized in synthetic musical instrument applications that provide adaptive score tempo. These and other realizations will be understood in the context of specific implementations and teaching examples that follow, including those that pertain to synthetic piano- or keyboard-type musical instrument application software suitable for execution on a portable handheld computing devices of the type popularized by iOS and Android smartphones and pad/tablet devices. In some exemplary implementations, visual cues presented on a multi-touch sensitive display provide the user with temporally sequenced note and chord selections throughout a performance in accordance with the musical score. Note soundings are indicated by user gestures captured at the multi-touch sensitive display, and one or more measures of correspondence between actual note soundings and the temporally sequenced note and chord selections are used to grade the user's performance.
In general, both visual cuing and note sounding gestures may be particular to the synthetic musical instrument implemented. For example, in a piano configuration or embodiment reminiscent of that popularized by Smule, Inc. in its Magic Piano application for iPad devices, user digit contacts (e.g., finger and/or thumb contacts) at laterally displaced positions on the multi-touch sensitive display constitute gestures indicative of key strikes, and a digital synthesis of a piano is used to render an audible performance in correspondence with captured user gestures. A piano roll style set of visual cues provides the user with note and chord selections. While the visual cues are driven by a musical score and revealed/advanced at a current performance tempo, it is the user's gestures that actually drive the audible performance rendering. Given this decoupling, the user's performance (as captured and audibly rendered) often diverges from the precise score visually cued. These divergences, particularly divergences from musically scored tempo, can be expressive or simply errant.
As will be appreciated, pleasing musical performances are generally not contingent upon performing to an absolute strict single tempo. Rather, variations in tempo are commonly used as intentional musical artifacts by performers, speeding up or slowing down phrases or individual notes to add emphasis. Indeed, these modulations in tempo (and note velocity) are often described as “expressiveness.” Techniques described herein aim to allow users to be expressive while remaining, generally speaking, rhythmically consistent with the musical score.
Accordingly, techniques have been developed to adaptively adjust a current value of target tempo against which timings of successive note or chord soundings are evaluated or graded. Tempo adaptation is based on actual tempo of the user's performance and, in some embodiments, includes filtering or averaging over multiple successive note soundings with suitable non-linearities (e.g., dead band(s), rate of change limiters or caps, hysteresis, etc.) in the computational implementation. In some cases, changes to the extent and parameterization of filtering or averaging windows may themselves be coded in correspondence with the musical score. In any case, by repeatedly recalculating the current value for target tempo throughout the course of the user's performance, both the pace of success visual cues and the temporal baseline against which successive user note/chord sounding are evaluated or graded may be varied.
In this way, expressive accelerations and decelerations of performance tempo are tolerated in the performance evaluation/grading and are adapted-to in the supply of successive note/chord sounding visual cues. Discrimination between expressive and merely errant/random divergences from a current target tempo may be based on consistency of the tempo over a filtering or averaging window. In some cases, expressive accelerations and decelerations of performance tempo may not only be tolerated, but may themselves contribute as a quality metric to the evaluation or grading of a user's performance.
In general, audible rendering includes synthesis of tones, overtones, harmonics, perturbations and amplitudes and other performance characteristics based on the captured gesture stream. In some cases, rendering of the performance includes audible rendering by converting to acoustic energy a signal synthesized from the gesture stream encoding (e.g., by driving a speaker). In some cases, the audible rendering is on the very device on which the musical performance is captured. In some cases, the gesture stream encoding is conveyed to a remote device whereupon audible rendering converts a synthesized signal to acoustic energy.
Thus, in some embodiments, a synthetic musical instrument (such as a synthetic piano, guitar or trombone) allows the human user to control a parameterized synthesis or, in some cases, an actual expressive model of a vibrating string or resonating column of air, using multi-sensor interactions (key strikes, fingers on strings or at frets, strumming covering of holes, etc.) via a multi-touch sensitive display. The user is actually causing the sound and controlling the parameters affecting pitch, quality, etc.
In some embodiments, a storybook mode provides lesson plans which teach the user to play the synthetic instrument and exercise. User performances may be graded (or scored) as part of a game (or social-competitive application framework), and/or as a proficiency measure for advancement from one stage of a lesson plan to the next. In general, better performance lets the player (or pupil) advance faster. High scores both encourage the pupil (user) and allow the system to know how quickly to advance the user to the next level and, in some cases, along which game or instructive pathway. In each case, the user is playing a real/virtual model of an instrument, and their gestures actually control the sound, timing, etc.
Often, both the device on which a performance is captured and that on which the corresponding gesture stream encoding is rendered are portable, even handheld devices, such as pads, mobile phones, personal digital assistants, smart phones, media players, or book readers. In some cases, rendering is to a conventional audio encoding such as AAC, MP3, etc. In some cases, rendering to an audio encoding format is performed on a computational system with substantial processing and storage facilities, such as a server on which appropriate CODECs may operate and from which content may thereafter be served. Often, the same gesture stream encoding of a performance may (i) support local audible rendering on the capture device, (ii) be transmitted for audible rendering on one or more remote devices that execute a digital synthesis of the musical instrument and/or (iii) be rendered to an audio encoding format to support conventional streaming or download.
In some embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s), a method includes using a portable computing device as a synthetic musical instrument, presenting a user of the synthetic musical instrument with visual cues on a multi-touch sensitive display of the portable computing device, capturing note sounding gestures indicated by the user using the multi-touch sensitive display and repeatedly recalculating a current value for the target tempo throughout a performance by the user and thereby varying, at least partially in correspondence an actual performance tempo indicated by the captured note sounding gestures, a pace at which visual cues for successive ones of the note selections arrive at a sounding zone of the multi-touch sensitive display. The presented visual cues are indicative of temporally sequenced note selections in accord with a musical score and the presentation of visual cues is in correspondence with a target tempo.
In some embodiments, the repeatedly recalculating includes, for at least a subset of successive note sounding gestures, (i) computing a distance from an expected sounding of the corresponding visually cued note selection and (ii) updating the current value for the target tempo based on a function of the computed distance. In some embodiments, the target tempo updating is based on the computed distances for only a subset of less than all of the successive note sounding gestures, and the subset is coded in association with the musical score.
In some embodiments, the method further includes identifying particular ones of the visually cued note selections as key notes and, for at least a subset of users or performances characterized as of low musical skill, substantially discounting or ignoring in the target tempo updating the computed distances of note sounding gestures from expected soundings of corresponding key note ones of the visually cued note selections. In some cases, the key note selections are identified in, or in association with, the musical score. In some cases, the key note selections coincide with phrase boundaries in the musical score. In some cases or embodiment, the method further includes characterizing a particular user or performance as of low musical skill based on acceleration of the particular user's sounding gestures, relative to baseline meter of the music score, at one or more key notes identified therein.
In some embodiments, the method further includes (i) determining correspondence of respective captured note sounding gestures with the note selections visually cued in the sounding zone and (ii) grading the user's performance based on the determined correspondences. In some cases, the determined correspondences include: a measure of temporal correspondence of a particular note sounding gesture with arrival of a visual cue in the sounding zone and a measure of note selection correspondence of the particular note sounding gesture with the visual cue. In some cases, the method further includes audibly rendering the performance on the portable computing device in correspondence with the captured note sounding gestures.
In some embodiments, the presented visual cues traverse at least a portion of the multi-touch sensitive display toward the sounding zone. In some cases, the repeatedly recalculating includes, for successive note sounding gestures: (i) computing a respective distance from an expected sounding of the corresponding visually cued note selection and (ii) updating the current value for the target tempo based on a function of the respective distance and similarly computed distances within window of successive note sounding gestures. In some cases, the respective distance is a distance on the multi-touch sensitive display normalized to time or tempo.
In some embodiments, the repeatedly recalculating includes computing, over a window of successive note sounding gestures, a rolling average of tempo lagging and tempo leading contributions to the current value of the target tempo. In some cases, the rolling average mathematically ignores note sounding gestures that lag or lead the current value of the target tempo by less than a tempo forgiveness threshold. In some cases, the window is a fixed window. In some cases, the window is of variable length and, for at least some of the visually cued note selections, is score coded.
In some embodiments, the synthetic musical instrument is a piano or keyboard. Visual cues travel across the multi-touch sensitive display and represent, in one dimension of the multi-touch sensitive display, desired key contacts in accordance with notes of the score and, in a second dimension generally orthogonal to the first, temporal sequencing of the desired key contacts paced in accord with the current value of the target tempo. In some cases, the sounding zone corresponds generally to a generally linear display feature on the multi-touch sensitive display toward or across which the visual cues travel.
In some embodiments, the synthetic musical instrument is a string instrument. Visual cues code, in one dimension of the multi-touch sensitive display, points of desired contact on corresponding ones of the strings in accordance with the score and, in a second dimension generally orthogonal to the first, temporal sequencing of the desired contacts paced in accord with the current value of the target tempo. In some cases, the sounding zone corresponds generally, for a given one of the strings, to a generally linear display feature on the multi-touch sensitive display toward which respective of the visual cues travel. In some cases, the captured note sounding gestures are indicative of both string excitation and pitch selection for the exited string. In some cases, the captured note sounding gestures include, for a particular string, contact by at least two digits of the user's hand or hands.
In some embodiments, the method further includes presenting on the multi-touch sensitive display a lesson plan of exercises, wherein the captured note selection gestures correspond to performance by the user of a particular one of the exercises; and advancing the user to a next exercise of the lesson plan based on a grading of the user's performance of the particular exercise.
In some embodiments, the portable computing device includes a communications interface and the method further includes transmitting an encoded stream of the note selection gestures via the communications interface for rendering of the performance on a remote device.
In some embodiments, the audible rendering includes modeling acoustic response for one of a piano, a guitar, a violin, a viola, a cello and a double bass and driving the modeled acoustic response with inputs corresponding to the captured note sounding gestures.
In some embodiments, the portable computing device is selected from the group of: a compute pad; a personal digital assistant or book reader; and a mobile phone or media player. In some embodiments, the method further includes geocoding the transmitted gesture stream; and displaying a geographic origin for, and in correspondence with audible rendering of, another user's performance encoded as another stream of notes sounding gestures received via the communications interface directly or indirectly from a remote device.
In some embodiments, a computer program product encodes in one or more media, the computer program product including instructions executable on a processor of the portable computing device to cause the portable computing device to perform the method. In some cases, the one or more media are readable by the portable computing device or readable incident to a computer program product conveying transmission to the portable computing device.
In some embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s), an apparatus includes a portable computing device having a multi-touch display interface and machine readable code executable on the portable computing device to implement the synthetic musical instrument. The machine readable code includes instructions executable to present a user of the synthetic musical instrument with visual cues on a multi-touch sensitive display of the portable computing device. The presented visual cues are indicative of temporally sequenced note selections in accord with a musical score, wherein the presentation of visual cues is in correspondence with a target tempo. The machine readable code is further executable to capture note sounding gestures indicated by the user on the multi-touch sensitive display and to repeatedly recalculate a current value for the target tempo throughout a performance by the user and thereby vary, at least partially in correspondence an actual performance tempo indicated by the captured note sounding gestures, a pace at which visual cues for successive ones of the note selections arrive at a sounding zone of the multi-touch sensitive display.
In some embodiments, the machine readable code is further executable to determine correspondence of respective captured note sounding gestures with the note selections visually cued in the sounding zone and to grade the user's performance based on the determined correspondences. In some cases, the apparatus is embodied as one or more of a compute pad, a handheld mobile device, a mobile phone, a personal digital assistant, a smart phone, a media player and a book reader.
In some embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s), a computer program product is encoded in media and includes instructions executable to implement a synthetic musical instrument on a portable computing device having a multi-touch display interface. The computer program product encodes and includes instructions executable to present a user of the synthetic musical instrument with visual cues on a multi-touch sensitive display of the portable computing device. Visual cues are indicative of temporally sequenced note selections in accord with a musical score and the presentation of visual cues is in correspondence with a target tempo. The computer program product also encodes and includes instructions executable to capture note sounding gestures indicated by the user on the multi-touch sensitive display and to repeatedly recalculate a current value for the target tempo throughout a performance by the user and thereby vary, at least partially in correspondence an actual performance tempo indicated by the captured note sounding gestures, a pace at which visual cues for successive ones of the note selections arrive at a sounding zone of the multi-touch sensitive display.
In some embodiments, the computer program product further includes instructions executable to determine correspondence of respective captured note sounding gestures with the note selections visually cued in the sounding zone and to grade the user's performance based on the determined correspondences. In some cases, the media are readable by the portable computing device or readable incident to a computer program product conveying transmission to the portable computing device.
These and other embodiments in accordance with the present invention(s) will be understood with reference to the description herein as well as the drawings and appended claims which follow.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example and not limitation with reference to the accompanying figures, in which like references generally indicate similar elements or features.
Skilled artisans will appreciate that elements or features in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions or prominence of some of the illustrated elements or features may be exaggerated relative to other elements or features in an effort to help to improve understanding of embodiments of the present invention.
Many aspects of the design and operation of a synthetic musical instrument with performance adaptive score tempo and/or quality metrics will be understood based on the description herein of certain exemplary piano- or keyboard-type implementations and teaching examples. Nonetheless, it will be understood and appreciated based on the present disclosure that variations and adaptations for other instruments are contemplated. Portable computing device implementations and deployments typical of a social music applications for iOS® and Android® devices are emphasized for purposes of concreteness. Score or tablature user interface conventions popularized in the Magic Piano®, Magic Fiddle™, Magic Guitar™, Leaf Trombone: World Stage™ and Ocarina 2 applications (available from Smule Inc.) are likewise emphasized.
While these synthetic keyboard-type, string and even wind instruments and application software implementations provide a concrete and helpful descriptive framework in which to describe aspects of the invented techniques, it will be understood that Applicant's techniques and innovations are not necessarily limited to such instrument types or to the particular user interface designs or conventions (including e.g., musical score presentations, note sounding gestures, visual cuing, sounding zone depictions, etc.) implemented therein. Indeed, persons of ordinary skill in the art having benefit of the present disclosure will appreciate a wide range of variations and adaptations as well as the broad range of applications and implementations consistent with the examples now more completely described.
Adaptive Tempo Behavior, for Example in Synthetic Piano-Type Application
In general, the audible rendering can include synthesis of tones, overtones, harmonics, perturbations and amplitudes and other performance characteristics based on the captured gesture stream. In some cases, rendering of the performance includes audible rendering by converting to acoustic energy a signal synthesized from the gesture stream encoding (e.g., by driving a speaker). In some cases, the audible rendering is on the very device on which the musical performance is captured. In some cases, the gesture stream encoding is conveyed to a remote device whereupon audible rendering converts a synthesized signal to acoustic energy.
The digital synthesis (554) of a piano (or other keyboard-type percussion instrument) allows the user musician to control an actual expressive model using multi-sensor interactions (e.g., finger strikes at laterally code note positions on screen, perhaps with sustenance or damping gestures expressed by particular finger travel or via a orientation- or accelerometer-type sensor 517) as inputs. Note that digital synthesis (554) is, at least for full synthesis modes, driven by the user musician's note sounding gestures, rather than by mere tap triggered release of the next score coded note. In this way, the user is actually causing the sound and controlling the timing, decay, pitch, quality and other characteristics of notes (including chords) sounded. A variety of computational techniques may be employed and will be appreciated by persons of ordinary skill in the art. For example, exemplary techniques include wavetable or FM synthesis.
Wavetable or FM synthesis is generally a computationally efficient and attractive digital synthesis implementation for piano-type musical instruments such as those described and used herein as primary teaching examples. However, and particularly for adaptations of the present techniques to syntheses of certain types of multi-string instruments (e.g., unfretted multi-string instruments such as violins, violas cellos and double bass), physical modeling may provide a livelier, more expressive synthesis that is responsive (in ways similar to physical analogs) to the continuous and expressively variable excitation of constituent strings. For a discussion of digital synthesis techniques that may be suitable in other synthetic instruments, see generally, commonly-owned co-pending application Ser. No. 13/292,773, filed Nov. 11, 2011, entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR CAPTURE AND RENDERING OF PERFORMANCE ON SYNTHETIC STRING INSTRUMENT” and naming Wang, Yang, Oh and Lieber as inventors, which is incorporated by reference herein.
Referring again to
Adaptive Tempo Behaviors
While some synthetic musical instruments (including Magic Piano for iPad available from Smule Inc.) have implemented a user interface paradigm in which notes are presented in accord with a musical score, users must generally conform (e.g., by tapping graphic icons corresponding to individual notes or chord clusters of notes) their note sounding to fixed tempo at which icons fall into view. While performance “stalls” are generally tolerated, target tempos are nonetheless fixed. Unfortunately, fixed tempo designs are not well adapted to expressive variation by the user musician and, in a game-play mode, would provide little opportunity for grading (or otherwise evaluating or scoring) the users performance except insofar as the performance slavishly conforms to note selections and the precise timing of a musical score.
As a result, synthetic piano implementations described herein utilize an adaptive tempo algorithm to scale the performance and presentation of notes to a user based on that user's actual performance tempo. In some cases or embodiments, observed musical skill may be considered in the tempo adaptation algorithms. In general, if users play notes purposefully and consistently faster, the tempo of note presentation will speed up accordingly to match the user's articulated tempo. Similarly, if users slow down their performance, the tempo of note presentation will accordingly slow down. As will be described later herein, it can be desirable to further specialize behaviors at phrase boundaries and/or key notes; however, purposes of introducing basic adaptive tempo techniques, we focus initially on a simplified model.
In order to score users as hitting the “correct” note, a visually highlighted region (or sounding zone) displayed on the multi-touch sensitive playing screen is used as a sounding (or key strike) zone; notes struck within that zone will be scored (i.e., added to the users total point count for the given song), and the tempo at which they are being struck is included for calculation within the note window used to calculate and smooth tempo. Recall generally the examples of
Exemplary Code
To facilitate understanding of exemplary implementations the techniques described herein, the following pseudo-code snippet is provided and is illustrative of an embodiment of tempo adaptation (see e.g., tempo adapt block 659,
Basically, the code that follows computes a “rolling average”, where the latest tempo estimate is summed against the previous n averages (where n is assigned from TEMPO_AVERAGING_POINTS) and a new average is computed from these values. The averaging over a window of several note/chord soundings tends to pull the computation to the current value of target tempo and not give much weight to abrupt changes unless they continue over several note/chord soundings. In this way the technique is not easily skewed to change tempo with abrupt changes due to unintentional errors (missed or extra notes, etc). Instead, the rolling average will move in a faster or slower direction if the user is consistently playing faster or slow over several notes or chords.
The new tempo estimate itself is computed from the distance between the current note's position on the screen and TARGET_OFFSET, representing the correct screen position (and hence time) to sound the note (or chord) at the current tempo. Distance is weighted and then used to relatively scale the most recent tempo value, based on a scaling factor (SCALING_FACTOR_UP or SCALING_FACTOR_DOWN).
In some embodiments, asymmetric scaling constants may provide advantages, such as providing for different tempo change gains when playing above or below the sounding zone and to allow independent scaling of speed-up and slow-down if desired. In other embodiments, both scaling factors are set to a uniform value (e.g., 160) that, given other constants illustrated, tend to provide a gain of about 40% in accelerating and decelerating contributions to a target tempo. A forgiveness factor is defined as the area (in pixels) around the correct position in which no tempo changes will occur. In the illustrated code, a TEMPO_FORGIVENESS of about 16 (i.e., ignoring variations of 16 pixels above and below a target sounding point at the center of the sounding zone) adds stability against unwanted tempo fluctuation when the user is trying to play steadily.
Generalizations and Further Refinements
In general, musical scores in storage 556 may be included with a distribution of the synthetic musical instrument or may be demand retrieved by a user via a communications interface as an “in-app” purchase. Generally, scores may be encoded in accord with any suitable coding scheme such as in accord with well known musical instrument digital interface- (MIDI-) or open sound control- (OSC-) type standards, file/message formats and protocols (e.g., standard MIDI [.mid or .smf] formats, extensible music file, XMF formats; extensible MIDI [.xmi] formats; RIFF-based MIDI [.rmi] formats; extended RMID formats, etc.). Formats may be augmented or annotated to indicate operative windows for adaptive tempo management and/or musical phrase boundaries or key notes.
Measures of lagging or leading distance from target (i.e., between a note sounding gesture and the corresponding visual cue) may optionally be conditioned (662) using a forgiveness dead band (e.g., to tolerate and ignore small lags and leads) and/or using limits on maximum distances by which a note sounding will be considered to lag a visual cuing. Alternatively or additionally, and as more completely explained below, musical skill discriminating embodiments, score-coded identifications of musical phrase boundaries or key notes may be used to selectively ignore or de-emphasize certain note targets in an adaptive tempo calculus. Eventually, scaling adjustments are calculated (663) and applied (664) to adjust the current value of target tempo (665) used to modulate a score-coded meter for presentation of successive note cues (e.g., successive display fireflies 601) in correspondence with successive notes/chords from score 651. Asymmetric lag and lead adjust gains, window-based smoothing (in some cases with variable window size defined in accord with score-coded phrase boundaries or delimited to exclude score coded key notes) or other desirable filtering/adaptation may be applied.
Turning next to
These accelerations tend to be highly transient and, if incorporated as leading distance contributions to a tempo adaptation calculation such as described above, would tend to inappropriately accelerate tempo for such amateur musicians. Accordingly, using key note or phrase boundary aware techniques explained above, techniques have (in some cases or embodiments) been refined to forego, reduce or limit (at least for amateur musicians) tempo adjustment based on such generally predictable transients. In some embodiments, distributed and/or demand-supplied computer readable encodings of musical scores (e.g., those supplied in furtherance of an “in-app” purchase) may be annotated or otherwise augmented to identify these phrase boundaries and/or key notes, thereby facilitating in tempo adjustment algorithm implementations (see e.g.,
In contrast, for users that exhibit a high degree of musical skill, foregoing, reducing or limiting the contribution of note sounding gestures that lead meter (at current tempo) of the musical score is typically unnecessary and may reduce the ability of the tempo adjustment algorithms to appropriately track an expressive flourish of the expert musician. Referring illustratively to
These distinct and generally discriminable classes of performance characteristics may be accommodated by refinement of our tempo adjustment algorithms in ways that improve the adaptation to performance for both classes of user musicians and, indeed, for an individual user musician as that user musician's level of skill improves. Specifically, for some cases or embodiments in accordance with the present invention, by foregoing, reducing or limiting the tempo adjustment contribution of performance accelerations (or leading distances, recall descriptions relative to
Performance Grading, Evaluation or Scoring
Specifically,
In some embodiments and game-play modes, note soundings by a user-musician are “scored” or credited to a grade, if the notes sounded and the timing thereof both correspond to the musical score and current target tempo. Thus, grading of a users expressed performance (653) will be understood as follows:
In this manner, songs that are longer and have more notes will yield potentially higher scores or at least the opportunity therefor. The music itself becomes a difficulty metric for the performance, some songs will be easier (and contain fewer notes, simpler sequences and pacings, etc.), while others will be harder (and may contain more notes, more difficult note/chord sequences, paces, etc.). Users can compete for top scores on a song-by-song basis so the variations in difficulty across songs are not a concern.
Expressiveness
One design goal for creating a flexible performance tempo grading system was to allow users to create expressive musical performances. As will be appreciated by many a musician, successful and pleasing musical performances are generally not contingent upon performing to an absolute strict single tempo. Instead, variations in tempo are commonly (and desirably) used as intentional musical artifacts by performers, speeding up or slowing down phrases or individual notes to add emphasis. These modulations in tempo (and note velocity) can be described as “expressiveness.”
Accordingly, in synthetic piano implementations described herein, we aim to allow users to be expressive while remaining, generally speaking, rhythmically consistent. A user performing the song perfectly at his own tempo, speeding up or slowing down gradually at various times could hypothetically score 100%. If a user abruptly speeds up or slows down (stops playing) those notes will not score, as the averaging window used to speed up and slow down the tempo stretches across approximately 7 notes.
As an added measure of expressiveness, the flexible scoring region provided in synthetic piano implementations described herein also allows users to “roll” chords, striking 2-4 note chords in a slightly arpeggiated fashion (where each note is slightly temporally offset). This kind of expressive performance is musically very effective and is allowed. The tempo value for a chord is determined by the striking of the last note of the chord.
Other Embodiments
While the invention(s) is (are) described with reference to various embodiments, it will be understood that these embodiments are illustrative and that the scope of the invention(s) is not limited to them. Many variations, modifications, additions, and improvements are possible. For example, while a synthetic piano implementation has been used as an illustrative example, variations on the techniques described herein for other synthetic musical instruments such as string instruments (e.g., guitars, violins, etc.) and wind instruments (e.g., trombones) will be appreciated. Furthermore, while certain illustrative processing techniques have been described in the context of certain illustrative applications, persons of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that it is straightforward to modify the described techniques to accommodate other suitable signal processing techniques and effects.
Embodiments in accordance with the present invention may take the form of, and/or be provided as, a computer program product encoded in a machine-readable medium as instruction sequences and other functional constructs of software, which may in turn be executed in a computational system (such as a iPhone handheld, mobile device or portable computing device) to perform methods described herein. In general, a machine readable medium can include tangible articles that encode information in a form (e.g., as applications, source or object code, functionally descriptive information, etc.) readable by a machine (e.g., a computer, computational facilities of a mobile device or portable computing device, etc.) as well as tangible storage incident to transmission of the information. A machine-readable medium may include, but is not limited to, magnetic storage medium (e.g., disks and/or tape storage); optical storage medium (e.g., CD-ROM, DVD, etc.); magneto-optical storage medium; read only memory (ROM); random access memory (RAM); erasable programmable memory (e.g., EPROM and EEPROM); flash memory; or other types of medium suitable for storing electronic instructions, operation sequences, functionally descriptive information encodings, etc.
In general, plural instances may be provided for components, operations or structures described herein as a single instance. Boundaries between various components, operations and data stores are somewhat arbitrary, and particular operations are illustrated in the context of specific illustrative configurations. Other allocations of functionality are envisioned and may fall within the scope of the invention(s). In general, structures and functionality presented as separate components in the exemplary configurations may be implemented as a combined structure or component. Similarly, structures and functionality presented as a single component may be implemented as separate components. These and other variations, modifications, additions, and improvements may fall within the scope of the invention(s).
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5587548 | Smith, III | Dec 1996 | A |
7446253 | Knapp et al. | Nov 2008 | B2 |
7521619 | Salter | Apr 2009 | B2 |
7563974 | Ozaki et al. | Jul 2009 | B2 |
7799984 | Salter | Sep 2010 | B2 |
7893337 | Lenz | Feb 2011 | B2 |
7906720 | Delorme | Mar 2011 | B2 |
8269094 | Buskies et al. | Sep 2012 | B2 |
8378194 | Daisy | Feb 2013 | B2 |
8414369 | Chiu et al. | Apr 2013 | B2 |
8419516 | Masuda et al. | Apr 2013 | B2 |
8629342 | Lee et al. | Jan 2014 | B2 |
20060107819 | Salter | May 2006 | A1 |
20070180978 | Ozaki et al. | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20070221046 | Ozaki et al. | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20080254824 | Moraes | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20080280680 | Dutilly et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090291756 | McCauley et al. | Nov 2009 | A1 |
20090312102 | Oberg et al. | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100184497 | Cichowlas | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20100282044 | Delorme | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20100294112 | Asakura et al. | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20110003638 | Lee et al. | Jan 2011 | A1 |
20110034247 | Masuda et al. | Feb 2011 | A1 |
20110088535 | Zarimis | Apr 2011 | A1 |
20110107899 | Charles | May 2011 | A1 |
20110130204 | Delorme | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20110146477 | Tsukamoto | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20110185880 | Charles | Aug 2011 | A1 |
20110283868 | Behringer et al. | Nov 2011 | A1 |
20110316793 | Fushiki | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20120151344 | Humphrey et al. | Jun 2012 | A1 |
20120160079 | Little et al. | Jun 2012 | A1 |
20120174735 | Little et al. | Jul 2012 | A1 |
20120174736 | Wang et al. | Jul 2012 | A1 |
20130157761 | Cichowlas | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20130180385 | Hamilton et al. | Jul 2013 | A1 |
20130233158 | Little et al. | Sep 2013 | A1 |
20140083279 | Little et al. | Mar 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
20070019090 | Feb 2007 | KR |
20090091266 | Aug 2009 | KR |
Entry |
---|
Gaye, L. et al., “Mobile music technology: Report on an emerging community”, Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression, pp. 22-25, Paris, France, 2006. |
Wang, Ge. “Designing Smule's iPhone Ocarina.” Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics, Stanford University. Jun. 2009. Print. 5 pages. |
Geiger, G. “Using the Touch Screen as a Controller for Portable Computer Music Instruments” Proceedings of the 2006 International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME06), Paris France, pp. 61-64. |
Geiger, G. “PDa: Real Time Signal Processing and Sound Generation on Handheld Devices” In Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, Barcelona, 2003, pp. 1-4. |
Schiemer, G. and Havryliv, M. “Pocket gamelan: tuneable trajectories for flying sources in Mandala 3 and Mandala 4”, In Proceedings of the 2006 Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression, Jun. 2006, Paris France, pp. 37-42. |
Tanaka, A. “Mobile Music Making” In Proceedings of the 2004 Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression, Jun. 2004, pp. 154-156. |
G. Wang et al., “MoPhO: Do Mobile Phones Dream of Electric Orchestras?” In Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, Belfast, Aug. 2008. |
G. Essl et al., “Mobile STK for Symbian OS.” In Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, New Orleans, Nov. 2006. |
G. Essl et al., “ShaMus—A Sensor-Based Integrated Mobile Phone Instrument.” In Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, Copenhagen, Aug. 2007. |
Robert Bristow-Johnson. “Wavetable Synthesis 101, A Fundamental Perspective.” Web. <http://musicdsp.org/files/Wavetable-101.pdf>. Last accessed Mar. 15, 2012. pp. 1-27. |
Pakarinen et al. “Review of Sound Synthesis and Effects Processing for Interactive Mobile Applications.” Report No. 8, Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics (TKK) Report Series. Mar. 23, 2009. [Retrieved: Feb. 24, 2012]. Web. <http://www.acoustics.hut.fi/publications/papers/mobilesynthandfxreport/mobilesynthandfxreport.pdf> entire document. |
Pocket Guitar. Pocket Guitar Review by AppGuide. May 29, 2009. [Retrieved on Feb. 24, 2012]. <http://www.macworld.com/appguide/app.html?id-69168&expand=false>. entire document. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61553781 | Oct 2011 | US |