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[ARSCLIST] Cow Cow 's return?



----- Forwarded by Dick Spottswood/dick/AmericanU on 06/08/2005 04:21 PM 
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OldHatRecords1@xxxxxxx
06/06/2005 06:13 PM
 
        To:     dick@xxxxxxxx
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        Subject:        Fwd: Can new technology allow the late great 
masters to perform once more?


 

----- Message from OldHatRecords1@xxxxxxx on Mon, 6 Jun 2005 18:06:26 EDT 
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marshallwyatt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject:
Can new technology allow the late great masters to perform once more?
Play It Again, Vladimir (via Computer)

ANNE MIDGETTE - New York Times  June 5, 2005

The house lights dimmed at the BTI Center for the Performing Arts in 
Raleigh, N.C., one night last month, the stage lights came up on the grand 
piano, and in front of a rapt audience Alfred Cortot played Chopin's 
Prelude in G (Op. 28, No. 3), as he had not for nearly 80 years. 

Cortot is dead, of course. He was not present in physical form, nor was 
anyone else sitting at the keyboard of the Yamaha Disklavier Pro as the 
keys rose and fell. But this was his performance come back to life: his 
gentle touch, his luminosity, even his mistakes, like the light brush of 
an extra note at the periphery of the final chord. 

So, at least, claimed Dr. John Q. Walker, the president of Zenph Studios 
in Raleigh, which sponsored the event and created the software that 
allowed Cortot to return. Dr. Walker is developing technology that enables 
him to break down the sounds of an old recording, digitize them and 
reproduce them on a Disklavier, an up-to-the-minute player piano that can 
record and replay performances by means of a CD in a slot above the 
keyboard. Sophisticated fiber optics control the instrument's hammers.

Old recordings of great performers are often marred by scratches and 
surface noise, or by sound badly filtered through primitive microphones. 
Dr. Walker is offering the same music with the immediacy of live 
performance and the acoustical advantages of a contemporary piano. To 
demonstrate the contrast, Dr. Walker also let the audience at the BTI 
Center hear the original Cortot recording from 1926, which sounds as if 
sand had been poured on the old disc's shellac. 

"The farther you get from the recordings, the worse they sound," Dr. 
Walker said by phone a few days before the concert. "The fundamental root 
of the problem is that I don't want to hear a recording. I want to hear 
the young Horowitz, Schnabel, Fats Waller, Thelonious Monk on an in-tune 
piano." 

If the claims he is making for his new technology are accurate, he will 
soon be able to. His plan is to approach the major labels with his 
software and delve into their back catalogs, acting as a record producer 
to make old recordings new. Josef Hoffman without the scratches, Glenn 
Gould without the mumbling: brought back to life and performing on modern 
pianos, recorded with modern technology.

"People say this is like colorizing old photographs, but it's not," Dr. 
Walker said. "This process is like being able to set up the entire scene 
of that photograph again and shoot it with a new camera from any angle, 
forever."

This is the new world of computer music. In its infancy, way back in the 
1960's, the goal was to use digital technology to create new sounds and 
new musical forms. Today scientists around the world are turning computers 
on human performance, seeking to quantify an element once thought to be 
intangible: the expressivity of a human artist. 

The piano is a good place to start. It offers a relatively limited set of 
variables. With the violin, every aspect of sound production is subject to 
human vagaries: bow pressure, bow speed, the placement of the fingers. On 
the piano, it comes down to hammers hitting strings. 

Developed by Wayne Stahnke, the first Disklaviers were made in the 1980's 
by Bösendorfer, the renowned Viennese piano manufacturer. When that 
company stopped making them, Yamaha took up the baton, hiring Mr. Stahnke 
as a consultant. Mr. Stahnke's best-known Disklavier project was a 
foretaste of Dr. Walker's efforts: translations of piano rolls recorded by 
Sergei Rachmaninoff. The two resulting CD's of "new" Rachmaninoff 
performances, both called "A Window in Time" and released in 1998 and 
1999, are still available from Telarc. Some listeners find these 
revelatory. Some find them mechanical, even soulless. The reactions 
demonstrate a basic difficulty with mechanical reproduction of music: 
there is a subjective element involved in determining if it works. The 
final criterion for any such reproduction is the rather imprecise "Turing 
test" of artificial intelligence: that is, whether it can make the 
listener think he or she is hearing a person rather than a machine. 

At the Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, a group of 
leading researchers known as the Machine Learning, Data Mining and 
Intelligent Music Processing Group are trying to pinpoint just what it is 
that fools the ear. Led by Gerhard Widmer, they are looking at everything 
from improving the way computers "hear" music to isolating the elements of 
individual performance style, as well as creating graphs and animations to 
illustrate different pianists' interpretations of the same passage of 
music.

In a 2003 paper, "In Search of the Horowitz Factor," Dr. Widmer and his 
team described giving the computer 13 recordings of Mozart piano sonatas, 
played into a Bösendorfer Disklavier by the pianist Roland Batik, to see 
if they could use the computer to determine rules that described the 
pianist's interpretive choices.

They did get some rules, though it turned out that many of them applied 
equally well to other performances of other music. But the machine 
generated its own performance of a Mozart sonata movement that it had not 
heard Mr. Batik play, but based on what it had learned of his style. With 
this, it took second prize in the International Computer Piano Performance 
Rendering Contest in Tokyo in 2002. With no stage fright. 

"The first question was, can we hear Glenn Gould play again?" Dr. Walker 
said. "The next question: Cool, can we hear him play other stuff?" To 
this, Dr. Widmer might answer: We're getting there. 

But there's still the thorny matter of how to get data from an audio 
recording into the computer. It's a question not just of having the 
computer play back a CD, but of translating the music into a language the 
computer can understand. 

A computer, by itself, can't recognize the difference between a note of 
music and a cough. It can't pick out a melody from a dense weave of 
counterpoint. It can't tap its foot to follow a beat - not, at least, in 
classical music, where the tempos are constantly changing. The first 
problem Dr. Walker faced was how to get the computer to create a kind of 
score from the clusters of sounds in a recording. 

"A recording is sound waves that were sampled by a microphone," he said. 
"We feed those into the computer and try to discover what the notes are. 
The computer model is a three-dimensional thing: middle C struck in a 
certain way looks like a 3-D mountain range. We have a model that looks 
like math equations, and we try to fit to it: Yeah, this looks like it's a 
note."

Dr. Walker - a trained pianist with a degree in software engineering who 
sold his company a few years ago, creating the time and financial 
flexibility to work on this project - is coming up with his own answers. 
But the process is still extremely time-consuming. He is reluctant to say 
just how slow it is, but he has been working for more than three years, 
and his demo CD includes only a few tracks: the Cortot, Glenn Gould's 
performance of the Aria and first variation of Bach's "Goldberg" 
Variations, and part of a track by Art Tatum. 

Even after he gets a model that works, Dr. Walker has to contend with the 
question of reproduction on a Disklavier: can it mimic human performance 
down to the last detail? Dr. Werner Goebl, a member of Dr. Widmer's team 
in Vienna, addressed this as co-author of a paper called "Are 
Computer-Controlled Pianos a Reliable Tool in Music Performance Research? 
Recording and Reproduction Precision of a Yamaha Disklavier Grand Piano." 
Precisely measuring the Disklavier's ability to replicate human touch, Dr. 
Goebl answered his own question: No. 

Less high-tech but just as relevant are the variations from one piano to 
another. A skilled musician compensates for changes in a room or an 
instrument. A CD cannot. Dr. Walker encountered one aspect of the problem 
when he took his technology to the Yamaha studios to play his Cortot 
performance for Mei-Ting Sun, a young concert pianist and the winner of 
the first Piano-e-Competition in 2002 (judged, in part, via a Disklavier 
in Japan, which reproduced performances thousands of miles away for one of 
the judges).

It had to do with the final chord in the Chopin prelude - or, rather, with 
the extra, wrong note.

"Their piano wasn't calibrating as ours was," Dr. Walker said, "and the 
note didn't sound. Mei-Ting said: 'I know this recording. This wasn't 
accurate, because Cortot misses the last chord.' I played it again, and he 
watched the keyboard and saw that the key went down but didn't sound. He 
said, 'O.K., you guys got it.' "

Mr. Sun was so convinced that at the North Carolina concert where Dr. 
Walker's version of Cortot made his debut, he appeared as the featured 
live artist: Cortot played a piece, Glenn Gould played a piece, and Mr. 
Sun played the rest of the evening. He had to; Dr. Walker didn't have 
enough music to fill a whole recital. 

The technology, in short, is still in its infancy. But Dr. Walker is 
animated by his vision of the future. Like other scientists - including 
Dr. Goebl in Vienna, another serious classical musician - he envisions a 
future of interactive recordings. "We've been trained that a recording is 
a frozen document," he said. "Why can't it be like a video game - every 
time you hear a recorded performance it's different?" But at the moment, 
his focus is on making new recordings in a more conventional manner. 

Dr. Goebl, in Vienna, supports Dr. Walker's work and is interested in it. 
But he questions whether it's a "real" performance. (Dr. Walker is well 
aware of such skepticism; his response is simply that you can't judge 
until you've heard it.) "The timing you can probably get quite right," Dr. 
Goebl said. "What is really difficult is to get how long the notes were 
held and how the pedal was moved and so on. You don't have that 
information. You can just guess. The result is something that sounds like 
but never truly will be Gould. It's always an approximation." 

So is he saying that Dr. Walker's track isn't authentic?

"There you have to go into the philosophical domain," Dr. Goebl replied. 
"A recording is just an acoustic document of what took place." 

In other words, a recording isn't authentic, either. It is also at a 
remove, or two or three, from the original performer, and it is also 
affected by the decisions of the engineers who helped create it.

The Gould recording, after all, wasn't recorded in one take. Many 
different takes were spliced together to create it. Is it any more real 
than a computer replica? Only if you say it is.

Play It Again, Vladimir (via Computer) - New York Times


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