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  2. AmpliFIND - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AmpliFIND

    AmpliFIND is an acoustic fingerprinting service and a software development kit developed by the US company MusicIP. MusicIP first marketed their fingerprinting algorithm and service as MusicDNS . In 2006, MusicIP reported that the MusicDNS database had more than 22 million fingerprints of digital audio recordings. [ 1 ]

  3. Ear training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ear_training

    In music, ear training is the study and practice in which musicians learn various aural skills to detect and identify pitches, intervals, melody, chords, rhythms, solfeges, and other basic elements of music, solely by hearing.

  4. Interval recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_recognition

    Some music teachers teach their students relative pitch by having them associate each possible interval with the first interval of a popular song. [1] Such songs are known as "reference songs". [ 2 ] However, others have shown that such familiar-melody associations are quite limited in scope, applicable only to the specific scale-degrees found ...

  5. Tunatic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunatic

    Tunatic is a freeware music identification program developed by Sylvain Demongeot for Windows and Mac OS.. The software analyzes a song by recording it via microphone or just by playing it through the sound card, and then it sends the data online to its database where it searches for a match.

  6. Musipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musipedia

    The latter can identify short snippets of audio (a few seconds taken from a recording), even if it is transmitted over a phone connection. Shazam uses Audio Fingerprinting for that, a technique that makes it possible to identify recordings. Musipedia, on the other hand, can identify pieces of music that contain a given melody.

  7. Relative pitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_pitch

    Relative pitch is the ability of a person to identify or re-create a given musical note by comparing it to a reference note and identifying the interval between those two notes. For example, if the notes Do and Fa are played on a piano, a person with relative pitch would be able to identify the second note from the first note given that they ...

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  9. List of music software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_music_software

    This is a list of software for creating, performing, learning, analyzing, researching, broadcasting and editing music. This article only includes software, not services. For streaming services such as iHeartRadio, Pandora, Prime Music, and Spotify, see Comparison of on-demand streaming music services.