The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology

In musicology and music research generally, the increasing availability of digital music, storage capacities, and computing power enable and require new and intelligent systems. In the transition from traditional to digital musicology, many techniques and tools have been developed for the analysis o...

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Published in:Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage
Main Authors: Abdallah, S., Benetos, E., Gold, N., Hargreaves, S., Weyde, T., Wolff, D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Association for Computing Machinery 2017
Subjects:
DML
Online Access:https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/
https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/1/Weyde-JOCCH-2017-Accepted.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918
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spelling ftcityunivlondon:oai:openaccess.city.ac.uk:16481 2023-07-02T03:32:05+02:00 The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology Abdallah, S. Benetos, E. Gold, N. Hargreaves, S. Weyde, T. Wolff, D. 2017-01-01 text https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/ https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/1/Weyde-JOCCH-2017-Accepted.pdf https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918 en eng Association for Computing Machinery https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/1/Weyde-JOCCH-2017-Accepted.pdf Abdallah, S., Benetos, E., Gold, N. , Hargreaves, S., Weyde, T. https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/view/creators_id/t=2Ee=2Eweyde.html Wolff, D.view all authorsEPJS_limit_names_shown_load( 'creators_name_16481_et_al', 'creators_name_16481_rest' ); (2017). The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology. Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage, 10(1), 2. doi:10.1145/2983918 https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918 doi:10.1145/2983918 QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science Article PeerReviewed 2017 ftcityunivlondon https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918 2023-06-13T18:35:06Z In musicology and music research generally, the increasing availability of digital music, storage capacities, and computing power enable and require new and intelligent systems. In the transition from traditional to digital musicology, many techniques and tools have been developed for the analysis of individual pieces of music, but large-scale music data that are increasingly becoming available require research methods and systems that work on the collection-level and at scale. Although many relevant algorithms have been developed during the past 15 years of research in Music Information Retrieval, an integrated system that supports large-scale digital musicology research has so far been lacking. In the Digital Music Lab (DML) project, a collaboration among music librarians, musicologists, computer scientists, and human-computer interface specialists, the DML software system has been developed that fills this gap by providing intelligent large-scale music analysis with a user-friendly interactive interface supporting musicologists in their exploration and enquiry. The DML system empowers musicologists by addressing several challenges: distributed processing of audio and other music data, management of the data analysis process and results, remote analysis of data under copyright, logical inference on the extracted information and metadata, and visual web-based interfaces for exploring and querying the music collections. The DML system is scalable and based on SemanticWeb technology and integrates into Linked Data with the vision of a distributed system that enables music research across archives, libraries, and other providers of music data. A first DML system prototype has been set up in collaboration with the British Library and I Like Music Ltd. This system has been used to analyse a diverse corpus of currently 250,000 music tracks. In this article, we describe the DML system requirements, design, architecture, components, and available data sources, explaining their interaction. We report use cases and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper DML City University London: City Research Online Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage 10 1 1 21
institution Open Polar
collection City University London: City Research Online
op_collection_id ftcityunivlondon
language English
topic QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
spellingShingle QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
Abdallah, S.
Benetos, E.
Gold, N.
Hargreaves, S.
Weyde, T.
Wolff, D.
The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
topic_facet QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
description In musicology and music research generally, the increasing availability of digital music, storage capacities, and computing power enable and require new and intelligent systems. In the transition from traditional to digital musicology, many techniques and tools have been developed for the analysis of individual pieces of music, but large-scale music data that are increasingly becoming available require research methods and systems that work on the collection-level and at scale. Although many relevant algorithms have been developed during the past 15 years of research in Music Information Retrieval, an integrated system that supports large-scale digital musicology research has so far been lacking. In the Digital Music Lab (DML) project, a collaboration among music librarians, musicologists, computer scientists, and human-computer interface specialists, the DML software system has been developed that fills this gap by providing intelligent large-scale music analysis with a user-friendly interactive interface supporting musicologists in their exploration and enquiry. The DML system empowers musicologists by addressing several challenges: distributed processing of audio and other music data, management of the data analysis process and results, remote analysis of data under copyright, logical inference on the extracted information and metadata, and visual web-based interfaces for exploring and querying the music collections. The DML system is scalable and based on SemanticWeb technology and integrates into Linked Data with the vision of a distributed system that enables music research across archives, libraries, and other providers of music data. A first DML system prototype has been set up in collaboration with the British Library and I Like Music Ltd. This system has been used to analyse a diverse corpus of currently 250,000 music tracks. In this article, we describe the DML system requirements, design, architecture, components, and available data sources, explaining their interaction. We report use cases and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Abdallah, S.
Benetos, E.
Gold, N.
Hargreaves, S.
Weyde, T.
Wolff, D.
author_facet Abdallah, S.
Benetos, E.
Gold, N.
Hargreaves, S.
Weyde, T.
Wolff, D.
author_sort Abdallah, S.
title The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
title_short The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
title_full The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
title_fullStr The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
title_full_unstemmed The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology
title_sort digital music lab: a big data infrastructure for digital musicology
publisher Association for Computing Machinery
publishDate 2017
url https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/
https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/1/Weyde-JOCCH-2017-Accepted.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918
genre DML
genre_facet DML
op_relation https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16481/1/Weyde-JOCCH-2017-Accepted.pdf
Abdallah, S., Benetos, E., Gold, N. , Hargreaves, S., Weyde, T. https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/view/creators_id/t=2Ee=2Eweyde.html Wolff, D.view all authorsEPJS_limit_names_shown_load( 'creators_name_16481_et_al', 'creators_name_16481_rest' ); (2017). The digital music lab: A big data infrastructure for digital musicology. Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage, 10(1), 2. doi:10.1145/2983918 https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918
doi:10.1145/2983918
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1145/2983918
container_title Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage
container_volume 10
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
op_container_end_page 21
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