A few AI music proejcts

On a recent episode of Music Ed Tech Talk, David MacDonald and I discussed the possibility of AI Chatbots coming to music.

The future is already here, apparently, as numerous AI music projects have made it on to my radar over the past few weeks. Here are links to a few intersting (or terrifying) ones, depending on your perspective.

NAMM --> John Mlynczak Named President and CEO of The National Association of Music Merchants

Congratulations John!

After a comprehensive year-long search, The NAMM Executive Committee and CEO Search Committee is pleased to announce industry veteran and music education advocate John Mlynczak as the next President and CEO of The National Association of Music Merchants.

Read the entire announcement here.

Listen to John as a guest on the Music Ed Tech Talk Podcast:

Linking Together Data Across Many Apps using Obsidian and Hookmark

In my recent trip to TMEA, I presented on the topic of my book, Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers.

There are a lot of different types of data to manage on a computing device. There are notes, tasks, events, words, websites, audio, video, sheet music, and more.

One of the things we discussed in the session is how the move to web-based productivity apps like Google Docs has made it challenging to organize website URLs alongside the documents that are stored locally on a computer.

It can be confusing to keep track of where all of this data is, especially when your different files may be spread across multiple apps and websites, even though they relate to the same subject.

I have been using a PKM app called Obsidian to create "dashboards" where I link this various data together.

Linking URLs to Google Docs is easy enough using copy/paste. But linking to other files that live on my hard drive is tricky.

I have been using the Mac app Hookmark, which solves this very friction. A keyboard shortcut (mine is Control+Command+Spacebar) takes whatever data is in the foreground, generates a link to it, and copies it to the clipboard, where it can be pasted somewhere else.

For example, I can be inside a note or a document I open frequently, invoke Hookmark, and then paste the a URL directly to that file right inside of my Obsidian Dashboard. The Dashboard can therefore include links to websites, notes, documents, and nearly any other kind of data imaginable.

I have a dashboard that matches each large project I have going in OmniFocus (where I manage my tasks). Creating links with Hookmark also allows me to link to specific tasks inside of the dashboard. It goes the other way too. I can link an Obsidian note to the notes field of an OmniFocus task to create better context for my data.

You can learn more about Obsidian in the podcast episode below.

Making a Wiki for Your Music Program in Craft

I have been singing the praises of Craft lately, a Personal Knowledge Management app made easy.

You can learn about Craft in the video or podcast episodes below.

Craft has replaced software I was previously using for notes, websites, writing, collaboration, and word processing. Making a note sharable with anyone who has the link is only two clicks.

Because Craft is so much easier to use than a learning management platform or a website builder, I have moved a lot of the information and resources I share with my music students to it. I can edit everything in Craft, students can see it all on the web.

At my recent TMEA presentation Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers, I spoke about this and showed off my "Band Wiki." A few people who attended the session asked to see how I have these pages set up in Craft. Here are some screenshots of how I set up the Band Wiki.

Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers - TMEA 2023 (4:15 pm)

Update! -- February 17, 2023:

Thanks to everyone who came to my session! I received two requests after the session and have since written two complimentary blog posts to address them.

  1. I was asked to show off the screenshots of my "Band Wiki" in Craft. You can view those here.
  2. I was asked if there are any strategies for making meaningful connections between web-based documents like Google Docs, and the more traditionally type that live on a hard drive. Here is a post about how I use Obsidian and Hookmark to create a personal wiki-style list of links to information of all kinds.

This blog post and presentation were prepared for the Texas Music Educators Association Professional Development Conference 2023.

This blog post exists to serve as both session notes for conference attendees, show notes for listeners of the podcast episode, and any teacher who wishes to develop intonation in their performing ensemble.

Where to Find Me

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  • My Book: Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers | Oxford University Press
  • My Scale Exercise Play-Along Tracks: Audio Only | Audio and Stems ... current on sale
  • My appearance on LearnOmniFocus.com (Learn how I manage time and tasks in the music classroom)

      • The three things that have changed the most since my book:

        • Not really a lot

        • I wrote it to be workflow based, not prescriptive. Some ideas are a little out of date but the principles remain

        • Exceptions and developments:

      • Types of data and where they go

      • Native apps vs. web apps

        • Native apps typically store data locally on your computer, sometimes giving you access to the individual files themselves in your file system
        • Web apps typically require an internet connection and keep your files all inside of the application they were created in
      • Project vs. Category/Tag vs. App organization

        • Files can be organized into Folders on your computer
        • Alternatively, files can be tagged on your computer, giving you a more dynamic and flexible organization system
        • You may also choose to think about your files as stored within the app they were created in (you might not have a choice if they were created using a web app)
      • Email

      • Tasks and projects

      • Notes

      • Files

        • Finder

        • Folders

        • Tags

        • Stacks

        • Syncing iCloud documents

        • Google Drive

        • Spotlight and Searching apps (finding it is the key) - Press Command+Spacebar

        • Use apps like Hook to bridge the gap between native and web apps

          • I use a Dashboard in Obsdian
      • Making things digital that are not digital

      • Sheet Music Management

      • Audio

        • iTunes

        • Apple Music

        • Spotify

        • IDAGIO

        • Apple Classical?

      • Automation

Teaching Intonation with Tonal Energy - TMEA 2023 (11:30 am, Room CC 216 B)

This blog post, podcast episode, and presentation were prepared for the Texas Music Educators Association Professional Development Conference 2023.

This blog post exists to serve as both session notes for conference attendees, show notes for listeners of the podcast episode, and any teacher who wishes to develop intonation in their performing ensemble.

Complimentary Podcast Episode:

Where to Find Me

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Support My Work

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Teaching Intonation

Philosophy

  • Prioritize these...
    • Tone
    • Intonation
    • Balance/Blend
    • Melodic Accuracy
    • Rhythmic Accuracy
    • Expression/Phrasing
    • Technique/Articulation
  • Sound Over Sight
    • If we are asking students to use their ears, then why are we having them use their eyes?
    • Natural Learning - think about how children learn to speak. Through modeling from parental figures, constant repetition, and encountering these repetitions in various contexts.
    • Electronic tuners can only tune intervals of unisons and octaves accurately.
    • We are used to hearing the piano in its slightly “out-of-tune” tempered state.
  • Interval Adjustment
    • Pure intervals have varying degrees of adjustment from tempered intonation to make them in tune.
    • Scale Degree | Adjustment
      • 1 | 0
      • 2 | +3.9
      • 3 | -13.7
      • 4 | -2.0
      • 5 | +2.0
      • 6 | -15.6
      • 7 | -11.7
      • 8 | 0
  • We must teach our students to HEAR when something is out of tune by listening for beats. But how?
    • Resonant intonation is the result of two other important features: superior tone and balance.
    • Good tone comes first.
    • Learning balance is difficult in a room by yourself.
    • Use of an electric drone helps.
    • Turn the drone up to a level that equals the student.
    • Song based learning that utilizes lots of simple melodies in standard keys teaches students to understand basic consonance and dissonance.
    • Lots of repetition!!!
    • Patients!
    • Reinforce that one success does not mean that everything will be in tune from here on out.
    • Don’t strive for a perfect intonation system. Resist teaching students the theory of intervals and focus on them hearing consonance and dissonance through listening to the relationships of intervals.
    • Once you know what a 5th sounds like, you can tune it anywhere.
    • Avoid technical talk unless something is absolutely in a students way.
  • Daniel Kohut - Musical Performance: Learning Theory and Pedagogy
    • Superior Concept
    • Relaxed Concentration
    • Focused Awareness
  • Reasons teachers give up on teaching intonation this way...
    • Fear of other areas of musical performance failing - wrong notes, rhythm, poor technique, inability to execute musically. The solution to this - pick easier music!!!
    • Abstract nature of these skills make them less concrete to student minds and harder to teach.
    • This is a long road. It takes time. But! - the end reward is ultimately better because students own their critical listening skills and now make musical adjustments themselves, even to features in the music that are not tone and intonation related. Each year will have an upswing towards the end. Independent musicianship is the result.

Features of Tonal Energy

  • Overview of each feature and setting - Live Demo
    • Strategies
  • Everything with drone
    • All music taught around tonal centers
    • Students tune down to the tonic most immediately beneath where the majority of their part sits
    • Students write tonal centers in their method books and concert music
  • Analyze mode - Students practice scale patterns and songs in this sequence...
    1. Visual and aural feedback
    2. Aural feedback only
    3. No drone at all
  • Practice Guide

CleanShot 2022-01-09 at 12.45.41.png

  • You can balance to the drone

    Tell students to match the volume of the drone at various levels.

  • Play along melodies with students on a keyboard or on the display

CleanShot 2022-02-03 at 18.21.25@2x.png

A midi keyboard like the Xkey can play certain key areas in tune perfectly and can automatically tune chords to just intonation. Combined with an iPad, this is like owning a Yamaha Harmony Director.

CleanShot 2022-02-03 at 18.21.47@2x.png

Lightly Row with Tuning Drones

Recording Tonal Energy into GarageBand with Inter-App Audio

Embellishing the Drone Track with Drums

Embellishing Lightly Row

Scale Exercise Play-Along Tracks with Trap Beats - Promotional Video

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Image.png

CleanShot 2022-02-03 at 18.23.30@2x.png

  • More Resources

Extra Show Notes from the Podcast Episode:

App of the Week

Album of the Week

Tech Tip of the Week

ChatGPT, Mastodon, and New iPad Apps

David MacDonald joins the show to discuss ChatGPT, Mastodon, new creative iPad apps, and more.

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Support Music Ed Tech Talk

Become a Patron!

Buy me a coffee

Thanks to my sponsors this month, Scale Exercise Play-Along Tracks.

Show Notes:

App of the Week:

Robby - Ivory

David MacDonald - The Eurorack Simulator

Music of the Week:

Robby - Fame - Cipher

David MacDonald - The Books - Lost and Safe

Where to Find Us:

Robby - Mastodon | Blog | Book

David MacDonald - Mastodon | Website

Please don’t forget to rate the show and share it with others!

I'm presenting at TMEA 2023

Hello! I am pleased to say I am presenting at the Texas Music Educators Association conference next month. Will you be there? If so, I hope you will check out one of my two sessions.

Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers - Wednesday, February 8 @ 4:15 pm, Room CC 214B

Teaching Intonation with Tonal Energy - Friday, February 10 @ 11:30 am, Room CC 216

Stay tuned to the blog for complementary session notes and links.

Watch ChatGPT Build A Working Guitar Pedal Plugin

This is one of the coolest things I have seen from ChatGPT so far.

In this video, the AI is able to write a functional VST plugin for a DAW that simulates a guitar pedal. Obviously this requires a lot of trial and error, as well as some human intervention at points. But this, to me, is why ChatGPT is compelling. You can talk to it conversationally.

There are a lot of ethical conversations about art and AI happening in my corners of the web these days, and I am not prepared to get into it here. That said, I think code is one of the examples where I have found AI to be an actual utility in my life. I have asked ChatGPT to write me short AppleScripts that automate cumbersome computer tasks, and it has done it successfully!