![]() I can see it being used in schools to help music students, which would be great if done in private, but humiliating in front of one's classmates. This technology will be a boon to recording studios, remixers, and anyone who wants to learn, say, the trumpet part from an orchestra performance. Trained on over 60 hours of videos, the “PixelPlayer” system can view a never-before-seen musical performance, identify specific instruments at pixel level, and extract the sounds that are associated with those instruments.įor example, it can take a video of a tuba and a trumpet playing the “Super Mario Brothers” theme song, and separate out the soundwaves associated with each instrument. The system, which is “self-supervised,” doesn’t require any human annotations on what the instruments are or what they sound like. A new artificial intelligence project from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) can extract and isolate individual instruments from a blended recording, or even a recording of a band playing together. ![]() Once a song is mixed and any master tapes of individual performance are discarded, there's no un-mixing the music, right? Not so fast.
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