Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics
CCRMA Seeks Facilities Specialist
Happy late summer to all! The staff at CCRMA are *elated* to announce that we are searching for a new person to join our team. Please feel free to ask questions of any of us about the position.
Detailed job posting and application can be found here: https://careersearch.stanford.edu/jobs/facilities-specialist-1-on-site-2...
COVID Policies
See CCRMA's COVID policies for 2023.
Upcoming Events
Schallfeld

Laura Gwilliams on Decoding the Semantics of Audio in the Brain

Josh McDermott (MIT) on Auditory Brain Models

Details to follow.
New music exchange with Japan: A creative Residency and Concerts by the Ensemble Kujoyama

CCRMA presents two concerts by the Japanese Ensemble Kujoyama, who is performing in the US for the very first time. The first concert on Thursday, October 12 at 7:30pm will feature the works of ten undergraduate students. The second one, on Saturday, October 14 at 7:30pm, will feature the works of two graduate students, one faculty members, and five Japanese composers.
FREE and Open to the Public | In Person + Livestream
Ensemble Kujoyama
Kaori Wakabayashi, flute
The two concerts are made possible thanks to the support from the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, the Stanford Shenson Fund, Friends of Chamber Music, American Asian Cultural Exchange, the Department of Music, and CCRMA. Also, the ensemble Kujoyama received a traveling grant from the Nomura Foundation and from the Japan Foundation.


Karlheinz Brandenberg - Spatial Sound - HRTFs vs. Room Reverb

Note special time.
- 1 of 2
- ››
Recent Events
Deep learning for symbolic music representations

Abstract: The talk will discuss the specific challenges of symbolic music representations for deep learning, with a particular emphasis on harmony and tonal analysis (although the methods discussed are applicable to other domains too). Valuable resources will be provided, including access to symbolic music datasets, essential software libraries, effective workflows, and practical insights for symbolic music data manipulation. The talk will also briefly discuss popular papers on the topic, as well as Néstor's research.
TOTAL VARIATION IN VOCALS OVER TIME

EGFxSet: ELECTRIC GUITAR TONES PROCESSED THROUGH REAL EFFECTS OF DISTORTION, MODULATION, DELAY AND REVERB

EGFxSet contains recordings of all clean tones in a Stratocaster guitar, with augmentations by processing through twelve electric guitar effects. Similar datasets apply effects using software, EGFxSet in contrast uses real guitar effects hardware, making it relevant to develop MIR tools with applications on real music. Annotations include all guitar and effect parameters controlled during our dataset recording. EGFxSet contains 8970 unique, annotated guitar tones, and is published with full open-access rights.
Elena Stalnaker's Senior Recital - Works by Women (c.1150-2023)

Featuring: Tamami Honma (collaborative pianist), Julia Yu (soprano), Jenny Xiong (piano, composition), Camila Wickman (piano), Emily Saletan (piano), Elizabeth Nguyen (viola), Gaby Li (cello), Aaron Hodges (drums)
Recent News
LISTEN: 1,200 Years of Earth’s Climate, Transformed into Sound

Science podcast featuring work by our fearless leader, Chris Chafe:
"When you sonify data, you experience time in a way you can’t when you look at a chart." Hal Gordon, Graduate student
Oakum - Eoin Callery
Released from behind the mixing console CCRMA's Concert Coordinator Eoin Callery has been set free to make an old-timey CD for Bay Area Label Eh? Records. Enjoy some amplified violin bow, guitar, and lots of Supercollider controlled feedback, all available on a small shiny disc and in a new fangled digital Bandcamp form.

Jonathan Berger Première
"Classical musicians face enormous expectations when they play a standard repertory work. Listeners have strong feelings about favorite pieces, even when they are open to fresh interpretive approaches.
The stakes are even higher with a premiere. Performing a new piece becomes an act of advocacy to pull an audience in.
Mystery of 101-year-old master pianist who has dementia
From the article: At first glance, she was elderly and delicate – a woman in her 90s with a declining memory. But then she sat down at the piano to play. “Everybody in the room was totally startled,” says Eleanor Selfridge-Field, who researches music and symbols at Stanford University. “She looked so frail. Once she sat down at the piano, she just wasn’t frail at all. She was full of verve.” Read more here...