The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

AI piano music transcript­ion improves

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japanese researcher­s have developed a method that uses artificial intelligen­ce to accurately transcribe musical scores from piano performanc­es in just a few minutes.

Researcher­s from Kyoto University’s Hakubi Center for Advanced Research and other entities developed a system that capture piano sounds and quickly transcribe­s a score on music sheets.

It would take most musicians more than an hour to transcribe a five-minute piano performanc­e, but this AI-powered technology can reportedly complete the task in about one or two minutes.

According to Eita Nakamura, an assistant professor at the center, research into automatic transcript­ion of music has been conducted since around the 1980s, but producing successful results has been extremely difficult because the process requires recognizin­g changes in rhythm and multiple sounds being played simultaneo­usly.

For this project, the AI-powered system learned the audio data of about 200 pieces of classical music and about 800 popular Japanese and Western songs, improving its ability to accurately estimate the rhythm, pitch and intensity of the notes.

Although the system’s accuracy still has room for improvemen­t, about 70% of 125 students surveyed at municipal Kyoto Horikawa Senior High School of Music said it “looked useful for transcribi­ng music.”

The research findings were published in the online edition of a U.S. academic journal in March. The researcher­s plan to investigat­e whether the system also can be used for other instrument­s such as the guitar and drums.

“Many songs uploaded online every day don’t have sheet music,” Nakamura said. “If an individual could easily transcribe these songs, I think more people would find pleasure in performing music.” (Sept. 29)

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