V O R T R A G ********************** Oesterreichisches Forschungsinstitut fuer Artificial Intelligence(OFAI) der OSGK Freyung 6/6, A-1010 Wien Tel: +43-1-5336112-17, Fax: +43-1-5336112-77, Email: sec@ofai.at Luis Jure, Lic Full Professor Escuela Universitaria de Música Universidad de la República, Uruguay http://www.eumus.edu.uy/eme/ https://iie.fing.edu.uy/investigacion/grupos/gpa/ "RHYTHMIC PATTERN ANALYSIS: THE URUGUAYAN CANDOMBE DRUMMING AS A CASE STUDY" Computational analysis of the rhythmic/metrical structure of music from audio signals is a well-known and important research topic in music information retrieval. Most existing automatic methods follow a bottom-up approach with little prior knowledge about the genre of the music under analysis. Therefore, their attainable performance is limited: they are typically unable to cope with music outside the western music tradition, exhibiting for instance syncopation or polyrhythmics. In this work, the Uruguayan Candombe drumming, an afro-rooted rhythm from Latin America, is considered as a case study. The characteristics that make it troublesome for typical algorithmic approaches are analysed and its repetitive rhythmic patterns are described. Then a supervised scheme for rhythmic pattern tracking aiming at finding the metric structure from an audio signal, including the phase of the beat, is proposed to tackle the Candombe analysis. The performance of the method is evaluated and compared with those of other beat tracking algorithms through a set of experiments involving synthetic sample-based audio signals as well as excerpts from real music recordings. The results of this work highlight the need for style-specific techniques for music analysis, particularly for non-western genres, and point out some directions for future research. ********* Time: Tuesday, 19th November 2013, 6.30 p.m. sharp Location: Oesterreichisches Forschungsinstitut fuer Artificial Intelligence, OFAI Freyung 6, Stiege 6, 1010 Wien OESTERREICHISCHES FORSCHUNGSINSTITUT FUER ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Univ.-Prof. Ing. Dr. Robert Trappl *********