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  2. Audiveris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiveris

    Audiveris is an open source tool for optical music recognition (OMR). It allows a user to import scanned music scores and export them to MusicXML format for use in other applications, e.g. music notation programs or page turning software for digital sheet music. Thanks to Tesseract it can also recognize text in scores.

  3. OpenOMR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenOMR

    OpenOMR is a pre-alpha open source optical music recognition (OMR) tool written in Java for printed music scores. [1] It allows a user to scan printed sheet music and play it through the computer speakers. It is being published as free software under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

  4. SmartScore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SmartScore

    Also, some scores scanned by Maximum PC weren't recognized by the software. [3] Researchers at the University of Florence conducted a performance assessment of optical music recognition software in 2007, and found that software developed at the University, Object Oriented Optical Music Recognition System, as well as SharpEye 2 outperformed it. [4]

  5. OpenSMILE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSMILE

    The software further includes music classification technology for automatic music mood detection and recognition of chorus segments, key, chords, tempo, meter, dance-style, and genre. The openSMILE toolkit serves as benchmark in manifold research competitions such as Interspeech ComParE, [ 4 ] AVEC, [ 5 ] MediaEval, [ 6 ] and EmotiW.

  6. Optical music recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_music_recognition

    Optical music recognition relates to other fields of research, including computer vision, document analysis, and music information retrieval. It is relevant for practicing musicians and composers that could use OMR systems as a means to enter music into the computer and thus ease the process of composing , transcribing , and editing music.

  7. Comparison of free software for audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_free...

    Released as free software in 2004 BSD-3-Clause (since OpenMPT 1.17.02.53) / GPL-2.0-or-later, partly public domain: SoundTracker: Yes No Yes No Fast Tracker clone GPL-2.0-or-later: SunVox: Alexander Zolotov Yes Yes Yes Yes Also runs on Windows CE. Proprietary (Music Creation Studio) BSD-3-Clause (Engine) Noise Station: Mark Sheeky No No No Yes ...

  8. 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 .

  9. Shazam (music app) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shazam_(music_app)

    Shazam for iPhone debuted on 10 July 2008, with the launch of Apple's App Store. The free app enabled users to launch iTunes and buy the song directly, [16] although the service struggled to identify classical music. [17] Shazam launched on the Android platform on 30 October 2008, [18] and on the Windows Mobile Marketplace a year later. [19]