ASSDOct 21, 2020

Addressing the Recitative Problem in Real-time Opera Tracking

arXiv:2010.11013v12 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a specific bottleneck in opera tracking for applications like live streaming and automated displays, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of inaccurate real-time opera tracking during recitative passages by proposing a dual-tracker system using music- and speech-sensitive features, achieving improved global accuracy for entire operas.

Robust real-time opera tracking (score following) would be extremely useful for many processes surrounding live opera staging and streaming, including automatic lyrics displays, camera control, or live video cutting. Recent work has shown that, with some appropriate measures to account for common problems such as breaks and interruptions, spontaneous applause, various noises and interludes, current audio-to-audio alignment algorithms can be made to follow an entire opera from beginning to end, in a relatively robust way. However, they remain inaccurate when the textual content becomes prominent against the melody or music -- notably, during recitativo passages. In this paper, we address this specific problem by proposing to use two specialized trackers in parallel, one focusing on music-, the other on speech-sensitive features. We first carry out a systematic study on speech-related features, targeting the precise alignment of corresponding recitatives from different performances of the same opera. Then we propose different solutions, based on pre-trained music and speech classifiers, to combine the two trackers in order to improve the global accuracy over the course of the entire opera.

Foundations

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