Mercurial > hg > sonic-visualiser
view README @ 1000:c05e5aa3d0f8 simple-fft-model
Smooth signal flow through from file to fft model
author | Chris Cannam |
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date | Mon, 15 Jun 2015 16:02:58 +0100 |
parents | 9f82fa990cbd |
children | 72daacb203a6 |
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Sonic Visualiser ================ Sonic Visualiser is a program for viewing and analysing the contents of music audio files. With Sonic Visualiser you can: * Load audio files in various formats (WAV/AIFF, plus Ogg and mp3 if compiled in) and view their waveforms * Look at audio visualisations such as spectrogram views, with interactive adjustment of display parameters * Annotate audio data by adding labelled time points and defining segments, point values and curves * Run feature-extraction plugins to calculate annotations automatically, using algorithms such as beat trackers, pitch detectors and so on (see http://vamp-plugins.org/) * Import annotation data from various text formats and MIDI files * Play back the original audio with synthesised annotations, taking care to synchronise playback with the display position * Slow down and speed up playback and loop segments of interest, including seamless looping of complex non-contiguous areas * Export annotations and audio selections to external files. Sonic Visualiser can also be controlled remotely using the Open Sound Control (OSC) protocol (if support is compiled in). Credits ------- Sonic Visualiser was developed at the Centre for Digital Music, Queen Mary, University of London. http://c4dm.eecs.qmul.ac.uk/ Sonic Visualiser was written by Chris Cannam with contributions from Christian Landone, Mathieu Barthet, Dan Stowell, Jesus Corral Garcia, Matthias Mauch, and Craig Sapp. Code copyright 2005-2007 Chris Cannam and copyright 2006-2014 Queen Mary, University of London, except where indicated in the individual source files. This work was partially funded by the European Commission through the SIMAC project IST-FP6-507142 and the EASAIER project IST-FP6-033902. This work was partially funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council through its Research Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music (CHARM). This work was partially funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council through the OMRAS2 project EP/E017614/1, the Musicology for the Masses project EP/I001832/1, and the Sound Software project EP/H043101/1. Sonic Visualiser is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the file COPYING included with this distribution for more information. Sonic Visualiser may also make use of the following libraries: * Qt5 -- Copyright Digia Oyj, distributed under the LGPL * JACK -- Copyright Paul Davis, Jack O'Quin et al, under the LGPL * PortAudio -- Copyright Ross Bencina, Phil Burk et al, BSD license * Ogg decoder -- Copyright CSIRO Australia, BSD license * MAD mp3 decoder -- Copyright Underbit Technologies Inc, GPL * libsamplerate -- Copyright Erik de Castro Lopo, GPL * libsndfile -- Copyright Erik de Castro Lopo, LGPL * FFTW3 -- Copyright Matteo Frigo and MIT, GPL * Rubber Band -- Copyright Chris Cannam, GPL * Vamp plugin SDK -- Copyright Chris Cannam and QMUL, BSD license * LADSPA plugin SDK -- Copyright Richard Furse et al, LGPL * RtMIDI -- Copyright Gary P. Scavone, BSD license * Dataquay -- Copyright Breakfast Quay, BSD license * Sord and Serd -- Copyright David Robillard, BSD license * Redland -- Copyright Dave Beckett and the University of Bristol, LGPL/Apache license * liblo OSC library -- Copyright Steve Harris, GPL (Some distributions of Sonic Visualiser may have one or more of these libraries statically linked.) Many thanks to their authors. Compiling Sonic Visualiser -------------------------- If you are planning to compile Sonic Visualiser from source code, please read the file INSTALL.txt. More information ---------------- For more information about Sonic Visualiser, please go to http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/