Modeling, Analyzing, and Synthesizing Expressive Piano Performance with Graphical Models

Abstract

Trained musicians intuitively produce expressive variations that add to their audience’s enjoyment. However, there is little quantitative information about the kinds of strategies used in different musical contexts. Since the literal synthesis of notes from a score is bland and unappealing, there is an opportunity for learning systems that can automatically produce compelling expressive variations. The ESP (Expressive Synthetic Performance) system generates expressive renditions using hierarchical hidden Markov models trained on the stylistic variations employed by human performers. Furthermore, the generative models learned by the ESP system provide insight into a number of musicological issues related to expressive performance.

Cite

Text

Grindlay and Helmbold. "Modeling, Analyzing, and Synthesizing Expressive Piano Performance with Graphical Models." Machine Learning, 2006. doi:10.1007/S10994-006-8751-3

Markdown

[Grindlay and Helmbold. "Modeling, Analyzing, and Synthesizing Expressive Piano Performance with Graphical Models." Machine Learning, 2006.](https://mlanthology.org/mlj/2006/grindlay2006mlj-modeling/) doi:10.1007/S10994-006-8751-3

BibTeX

@article{grindlay2006mlj-modeling,
  title     = {{Modeling, Analyzing, and Synthesizing Expressive Piano Performance with Graphical Models}},
  author    = {Grindlay, Graham and Helmbold, David P.},
  journal   = {Machine Learning},
  year      = {2006},
  pages     = {361-387},
  doi       = {10.1007/S10994-006-8751-3},
  volume    = {65},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/mlj/2006/grindlay2006mlj-modeling/}
}