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jason on 04/05/2012 at 06:36PM
Announcing New FMA Music Discovery Tools
We get a surprising number of emails asking, "What type of Free Music Archive is this if you don't have any Miley Cyrus and Justin Beber [sic]?" Well, we're really gonna splode some heads now that a search for any artist can return similar results from the FMA library. This is just one of many new features to help you find the sounds you seek:
The List of Artists available at freemusicarchive.org/music is a great place to start any visit to the FMA. With nearly 9000 artists and more added daily, it's like a magic eye full of surprises!
Once you land on an artist page, you'll see a list of Similar Artists on the FMA. This is powered by The Echo Nest, who integrated with the Free Music Archive last year. Their machine learning platform analyzes music by listening to it (extracting key, tempo, rhythm, timbre and other attributes) and by reading about it (crawling the web to find out where and when the music was made and what other music it is compared to in blogs and reviews).
Echo Nest also powers our new Similar Artist Search. From our regular search page, enter the name of any artist, and hit the 'music by similar artists' radio button (pictured at left). You can also filter your results by use, but be sure to check the license from the track page (Help | FAQ) NOTE: There is a rate limit, so please choose your searches wisely. If your search doesn't return any results, try again at a quieter time.
Filter Search by Genre is now integrated with our regular music search:
Track Pages show Mixtapes that the song appears on. For example, this Patrick Lee jam is featured on a bunch of other great mixes by FMA users—just click the track title or the "i" button to hear 'em (also included after the jump)!
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jason on 11/07/2011 at 05:30PM
FMA Radio & more from Music Hack Day
One of the 50+ projects to spring from this weekend's Music Hack Day, Free Music Archive Radio is essentially the template for a Creative Commons Pandora. Enter the name of any artist, and FMA Radio taps into the Echo Nest's musical brain to generate a similar playlist from the FMA's curated library of 40,000+ legal mp3s. Tweak your station further with Mood and Style parameters, and/or Creative Commons license filters.
Despite the fact that it's just a demo (works best on Chrome, not so well on Firefox) FMA Radio has already been written up in evolver.fm, the Dutch blog Muziek & de bibliotheek, and Germany's Progolog. Its awesomeness is enhanced by the fact that it's html5 (plays nice with iPhone/iPad), it's open source, and it was built over the course of 24-hours (whoa!). I spent much of the weekend hanging out with FMA Radio's creators Jeremy Sawruk, Robby Grodin (ConductiveIO) and Julie Vera, the Music Hack Day veterans whose previous projects include Sawruk's Feedtunes (turns Twitter trends into playlists based on song lyrics) and Grodin's Toscanini gestural interface. In addition to releasing open source code, Sawruk and Grodin are Creative Commons musicians, and they've really done an incredible service to the community via FMA Radio.
Music Hack Day is a series of music/tech gatherings fueled in large part by APIs. After the big news last month that FMA's API had been revamped and mapped to the Echo Nest's Rosetta Stone leading up to WFMU's Radiovision Festival, this weekend introduced the FMA to the mother of all music hacking events. It was fantastic to take part -- some highlights after the jump:
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jason on 10/21/2011 at 09:13AM
Radiovision NYC Hack Day Oct 30th: Demo a similarity-based HTML5 Free Music Archive player, powered by The Echo Nest
Following up on last week's announcement that The Echo Nest has indexed the Free Music Archive catalog, Mike Adler put together an open source hack to demonstrate one of the myriad possibilities when this most incredible music intelligence platform is applied to the finest collection of free music.
The demo lets you search for any artist in the universe that Echo Nest knows about, and returns similar results from within the Free Music Archive's catalog in an HTML5 audio player. Go ahead and try it out. This is an incredibly powerful music discovery tool, though it's just the start of what we can build together. Sign up for API keys at the FMA and The Echo Nest to begin tinkering with our demo hack.
Next week, we're holding a Hack Day as part of WFMU's Radiovision Festival: Sunday October 30th we will "Re-invent Radio" with The Echo Nest, the Free Music Archive, and Zeega's new HTML5 platform for digital storytellers. There'll be workshops on Musical Timelines, Hacking Physical Spaces, and Multimedia Mash-ups, so plenty of opportunity to participate in the hands-on making of stuff whether or not you've got the proverbial coder's neckbeard. The Radiovision Festival takes place atop WFMU's annual Record Fair at NYC's Metropolitan Pavilion (125 W. 18th St), and Hack Day is free with RecFair admission as long as you reserve a spot in advance.
jason on 10/13/2011 at 12:54PM
RadioVision: FMA Melds w Echo Nest's Musical Brain
The Echo Nest has indexed the Free Music Archive catalog, integrating the most incredible music intelligence platform with the finest collection of free music.
The Echo Nest has been called "the most important music company on Earth" for good reason: 12 years of research at UC Berkeley, Columbia and MIT factored into the development of their "musical brain." The platform combines large-scale data mining, natural language processing, acoustic analysis and machine learning to automatically understand how the online world describes every artist, extract musical attributes like tempo and time signature, learn about music trends (see: "hotttnesss"), and a whole lot more. Echo Nest then shares all of this data through a free and open API. [read more here]
FMA's library of 40,000 free & legal music files have now been analyzed by the Echo Nest and made easily accessible to the developer community through a common Artist, Track, and Album ID system. Licensing information is included as part of the API, and so developers working in the Creative Commons sphere now have an incredible pool of curated audio to draw from for their noncommercial music applications.
Combining The Echo Nest's music intelligence tools with the FMA's curated approach opens up exciting possibilities for interactive music applications and new music discovery. For example, the Echo Nest's sandbox documentation describes how to query for artists who share music via the FMA and are similar to Radiohead
>> Read More About FMA + Echo Nest for more information about how to access this wonderful resource
The Echo Nest presents as part of WFMU's RadioVision Festival NYC, as part of the October 30th "Reinventing Radio" Hack Day along with the FMA and Zeega, an open-source html5 platform for digital storytellers -- RSVP here
