Academic literature on the topic 'Guitar transcription'

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Journal articles on the topic "Guitar transcription"

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Burlet, Gregory, and Abram Hindle. "Isolated guitar transcription using a deep belief network." PeerJ Computer Science 3 (March 27, 2017): e109. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.109.

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Music transcription involves the transformation of an audio recording to common music notation, colloquially referred to as sheet music. Manually transcribing audio recordings is a difficult and time-consuming process, even for experienced musicians. In response, several algorithms have been proposed to automatically analyze and transcribe the notes sounding in an audio recording; however, these algorithms are often general-purpose, attempting to process any number of instruments producing any number of notes sounding simultaneously. This paper presents a polyphonic transcription algorithm that is constrained to processing the audio output of a single instrument, specifically an acoustic guitar. The transcription system consists of a novel note pitch estimation algorithm that uses a deep belief network and multi-label learning techniques to generate multiple pitch estimates for each analysis frame of the input audio signal. Using a compiled dataset of synthesized guitar recordings for evaluation, the algorithm described in this work results in an 11% increase in the f-measure of note transcriptions relative to Zhou et al.’s (2009) transcription algorithm in the literature. This paper demonstrates the effectiveness of deep, multi-label learning for the task of polyphonic transcription.
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Finkelshtein, Yulia A. "Igor Stravinsky and Academic Guitar Music." Observatory of Culture, no. 1 (February 28, 2015): 40–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/2072-3156-2015-0-1-40-45.

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Presents the results of the study in classical guitar music by Stravinsky. The author considers three pieces by Stravinsky where he used guitar and his transcription of the “Four Russian songs” suite (version of 1953-1954) that included a guitar part. The specificity of interpretation of the tone quality, the instrument capabilities in Stravinsky’s understanding and the features of composer’s style apparent in this music cycle are revealed. The author also focuses on the bell ringing effects that are particular of the piece.
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Abeser, Jakob, and Gerald Schuller. "Instrument-Centered Music Transcription of Solo Bass Guitar Recordings." IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing 25, no. 9 (September 2017): 1741–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/taslp.2017.2702384.

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Barbancho, Ana M., Anssi Klapuri, Lorenzo J. Tardon, and Isabel Barbancho. "Automatic Transcription of Guitar Chords and Fingering From Audio." IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing 20, no. 3 (March 2012): 915–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tasl.2011.2174227.

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Macaulay, Anne, Richard T. Pinnell, and Francesco Corbetta. "Francesco Corbetta and the Baroque Guitar, with a Transcription of His Works." Galpin Society Journal 41 (October 1988): 134. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/842733.

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Budhiono, Sofia Shieldy, and I. Dewa Made Bayu Atmaja Darmawan. "Pitch Transcription of Solo Instrument Tones Using the Autocorrelation Method." JELIKU (Jurnal Elektronik Ilmu Komputer Udayana) 8, no. 3 (January 25, 2020): 347. http://dx.doi.org/10.24843/jlk.2020.v08.i03.p18.

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Pitch transcription is basically identifying and copying pitch on an audio or music. In this case, the pitch of a solo instrument music is processed to find the composition of the music tones, the method used is autocorrelation. After processing, the system will produce pitch transcription results from the audio that has been processed. this research done digitalization of an old method of identifying pitches into an application that is able to transcribe pitches in an audio. This Pitch Transcription application was created using the Python programming language with Librosa library as a library for audio processing. The purpose of making this system is to facilitate the identification of pitch from a solo instrument music. This Application Feature itself besides being able to show the results of pitch transcription can also display the Onset Graph, Signal Graph play the results of the synthesis transcribed audio sounds. Testing in this study uses audio sourced from 4 single instruments, there are flute, piano, violin and acoustic guitar. The test results show that the implementation of the autocorrelation method in the solo instrument tone transcription application has an accuracy of 92.85%.
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Scott, Andrew. ""I See the Fretboard in Diagrams": An Examination of the Improvisatory Style of Herbert Lawrence "Sonny" Greenwich." Canadian University Music Review 24, no. 1 (March 8, 2013): 62–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1014671ar.

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In this article, the author examines the improvisatory style of jazz musician Herbert Lawrence "Sonny" Greenwich. While numerous extra-musical sources inform the guitarist's performances, the cubist paintings of Paul Klee are particularly meaningful. Through transcription, analysis and interview, the author demonstrates that fretboard "diagrams"—which Greenwich suggests originate from Klee—act in a threefold manner. First, they afford Greenwich a personal way of discussing his craft, second they offer a formulaic and perceptual strategy for traversing various harmonic terrains and third these diagrams act as a surrogate music theory for the self-taught musician, affording him a unique method of organizing the guitar.
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Cui, Xiaodong, Zhen Wei, Lin Zhang, Hui Liu, Lei Sun, Shao-Wu Zhang, Yufei Huang, and Jia Meng. "Guitar: An R/Bioconductor Package for Gene Annotation Guided Transcriptomic Analysis of RNA-Related Genomic Features." BioMed Research International 2016 (2016): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/8367534.

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Biological features, such as genes and transcription factor binding sites, are often denoted with genome-based coordinates as the genomic features. While genome-based representation is usually very effective in correlating various biological features, it can be tedious to examine the relationship between RNA-related genomic features and the landmarks of RNA transcripts with existing tools due to the difficulty in the conversion between genome-based coordinates and RNA-based coordinates. We developed here an open sourceGuitarR/Bioconductor package for sketching the transcriptomic view of RNA-related biological features represented by genome based coordinates. Internally,Guitarpackage extracts the standardized RNA coordinates with respect to the landmarks of RNA transcripts, with which hundreds of millions of RNA-related genomic features can then be efficiently analyzed within minutes. We demonstrated the usage ofGuitarpackage in analyzing posttranscriptional RNA modifications (5-methylcytosine and N6-methyladenosine) derived from high-throughput sequencing approaches (MeRIP-Seq and RNA BS-Seq) and show that RNA 5-methylcytosine (m5C) is enriched in 5′UTR. The newly developedGuitarR/Bioconductor package achieves stable performance on the data tested and revealed novel biological insights. It will effectively facilitate the analysis of RNA methylation data and other RNA-related biological features in the future.
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Heck, Thomas F. "The Complete Guitar Works: A Transcription and Translation of the Complete Music and Text in Sanz's Instruccion de musica sobre la guitarra espanola (Zaragoza, 1674/5 and 1697) (review)." Notes 60, no. 1 (2003): 275–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/not.2003.0104.

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Kryhin, Oleksandr. "Segovia’s concert heritage as the basis of forming the guitar performing traditions of the XX century." Problems of Interaction Between Arts, Pedagogy and the Theory and Practice of Education 50, no. 50 (October 3, 2018): 17–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum1-50.02.

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Background. The academic guitar art, which announced itself at the beginning of the XXI century as one of the dominant and sought-after forms of the concert music making, in recent decades has become the subject of scientific reflection. However, due to a later start time of its evolvement, it turned out to be less explored than other concert genres. The birth of the academic guitar art in the early twentieth century associated with the name of A. Segovia, together with whose creativity it stepped beyond the limits of the Spanish national culture and came to the world level. Creativity of the contemporaries and compatriots of A. Segovia, the famous guitarists of the first half of the twentieth century C. Romero, R. Sáinz de la Maza and M. Llobet, did not have that cultural and artistic weight, which could be a basis for ascension of the Spanish guitar art to the European professional heights. Exactly A. Segovia was able to do this. In spite of the fact that the importance of A. Segovia’s activities for the formation of the new performing guitar traditions of the twentieth century is enormous, it has not yet received its systemic coverage. Thus, the relevance of this article is caused, on the one hand, by the great interest in the academic guitar art in recent years, and on the other, by the lack of the special scientific studies dedicated to the performing art of the outstanding Spanish guitarist. Existing studies contain only incomplete historical data [3; 7] or the compressed socio-cultural panorama of A. Segovia’s creative activity and the period of formation of the guitar performing traditions of the twentieth century [1, p. 4–6]. Objectives. The proposed research considers the features of the performing art of A. Segovia at its different stages in order to identify the patterns of its evolvement and the main its achievements from the point of view of the contemporary guitar art. For the first time, a comprehensive assessment of the concert heritage of the Spanish maestro in the aspect of its legislative influence upon the modern academic guitar creativity is given. Methods of the research. The complex of general scientific research methods makes it possible to disclose the basic positions of the article: signification of the classical guitar in the family of the academic solo instruments (systems approach); the evolution paths of an academic guitar (historical approach); comprehension of the guitar creativity in a broad socio-cultural aspect (cultural approach); definition of the author’s performing style of A. Segovia (interpretational approach). Results. For comprehension of the evolution of A. Segovia’s performing arts, maestro’ concert programs are considered. The first big performance (March 12, 1916) included 19 pieces (Par I – the arrangements by A. Segovia and one piece by M. Llobet; Part II – the works by J. Bach, J. Haydn, F. Mendelssohn, F. Chopin, all transcribed for guitar by F. Tárrega; Part III – the music by I. Albeniz, E. Granados and one play by P. Tchaikovsky). At this stage of evolution of the academic guitar art, A. Segovia could not present in the program the works of the Renaissance epoch; besides, in the historical and cultural aspect, the program is formatted inconsequently. However, in our opinion, the program is logical and justified in its own way, and its third part that almost entirely formed from the works of the Spanish national classics one can consider as a response to the ideology of “Renacimiento” – the movement for the national revival of Spain. The ending of the decade of the fruitful concert activity of A. Segovia coincided with his tours in the territory of present-day Russia and Ukraine. In 1926, A. Segovia gave six concerts in Moscow and two concerts in Leningrad, and in 1927 – six concerts in Moscow, three concerts in Leningrad, and one each in Kharkov and Kiev. The analysis shows that the total number of works in A. Segovia’s repertoire list during his Moscow tour performances in 1926–1927 has grown to 75. They belonged to different historical eras and various performing styles, to 28 authors from different countries. The extensive repertoire corresponding to A. Segovia’s exquisite taste embodied in elegant performing interpretations, which reflected in the feedback from listeners and music critics. Over 10 years of his concert activity, the total repertoire of A. Segovia expanded significantly (up to 300 works), not only due to his own transcriptions of works by J. Bach, G. Handel, W. Mozart, J. Haydn, F. Schubert, F. Tárrega, I. Albeniz and E. Granados, but also thanks to the works of a new wave of composers: A. Tansman, F. Moreno Torroba, J. Turina, which created a number of pieces for guitar at the request of A. Segovia. Conclusions. Thus, contingently, A. Segovia’s concert activity one can divide into two big stages: before and after 1924. The culmination point of the first stage is related with the successful performance in Barcelona (1916), which eliminated some acoustic and psychological barriers that hampered guitar performers and organizers of concerts (A. Segovia is the first guitarist who was playing in the hall for 1000 seats). The first tour in Paris in April 1924, which began the second stage of the maestro’s concert activity, can be considered as a landmark event on the path of world recognition of A. Segovia. Henceforth the format of the concert programs of A. Segovia and his recordings on disks thought out clearly, it is structured delicately based on the musical styles of certain historical periods. An important place the works of modern composers occupied. The concert heritage of A. Segovia is a reflection of the evolution of the guitar repertoire. It progressed from the limited by the previous tradition in the early twentieth century up to the universal format, combining the best examples of the folk music (flamenco), the transcriptions of European classical music and the modern works bearing the newest sound images. Among the authors of such, at the request of A. Segovia, were M. Castelnuovo-Tedesko, F. Moreno Torroba, M. Ponce, J. Rodrigo, A. Tansman.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Guitar transcription"

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Burlet, Gregory. "Automatic guitar tablature transcription online." Thesis, McGill University, 2013. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=117224.

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Manually transcribing guitar tablature from an audio recording is a difficult and time-consuming process, even for experienced guitarists. While several algorithms have been developed to automatically extract the notes occurring in an audio recording, and several algorithms have been developed to produce guitar tablature arrangements of notes occurring in a music score, no frameworks have been developed to facilitate the combination of these algorithms. This work presents a web-based guitar tablature transcription framework capable of generating guitar tablature arrangements directly from an audio recording. The implemented transcription framework, entitled Robotaba, facilitates the creation of web applications in which polyphonic transcription and guitar tablature arrangement algorithms can be embedded. Such a web application is implemented, resulting in a unified system that is capable of transcribing guitar tablature from a digital audio recording and displaying the resulting tablature in the web browser. The performance of the implemented polyphonic transcription and guitar tablature arrangement algorithms are evaluated using several metrics on a new dataset of manual transcriptions gathered from tablature websites.
Transcrire à la main une tablature pour guitare à partir d'un enregistrement audio est un processus difficile et long, même pour les guitaristes chevronnés. Bien que plusieurs algorithmes aient été créés pour extraire automatiquement les notes d'un enregistrement audio, et d'autres pour préparer des arrangements de notes de tablature pour guitare tels qu'on les retrouve dans la création musicale, aucun environnement n'a été mise en place pour faciliter l'association de ces algorithmes. Le travail qui suit présente un environnement accessible sur l'Internet, permettant la transcription et la préparation d'arrangements de tablatures de guitare, directement à partir d'un enregistrement audio. Cet environnement de transcription, nommée Robotaba, facilite la création d'applications Web, dans lesquelles la transcription polyphonique et les algorithmes d'arrangements de tablature pour guitare peuvent être intégrés. Une telle application Web permet d'obtenir un système unifié, capable de transcrire une tablature pour guitare à partir d'un enregistrement audio numérique, et d'afficher la tablature obtenue dans un navigateur Web. La performance de la transcription polyphonique mise en place et des algorithmes d'arrangements de tablature pour guitare est évaluée à l'aide de plusieurs paramètres et d'un nouvel ensemble de données, constitué de transcriptions manuelles recueillies dans des sites Web consacrés aux tablatures.
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Vera, Fernand Toribio Soler Antonio Soler Antonio. "Selected harpsichord sonatas by Antonio Soler analysis and transcription for classical guitar duo /." connect to online resource, 2008. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-9727.

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Sonata transposed to D minor. System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Accompanied by 4 recitals, recorded Apr. 25, 2005, Sept. 26, 2005, Nov. 27, 2006, and Oct. 13, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 54-55).
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Vera, Fernand Toribio. "Selected Harpsichord Sonatas by Antonio Soler: Analysis and Transcription for Classical Guitar Duo." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2008. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc9727/.

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Due to the limited repertoire for the guitar from the Baroque period, classical guitarists who wish to perform music from this era have to work primarily with transcriptions. Guitarists draw from various sources from this period such as vocal and instrumental music for the five-course guitar, lute and the harpsichord. Of these sources, the repertoire for the harpsichord is perhaps the most frequently arranged for various guitar formations because its textures are greatly similar to those of the guitar repertoire. As a result, harpsichord music tends to transfer well to the guitar. Baroque harpsichord composers such as Domenico Scarlatti, Johann Sebastian Bach, François Couperin, and Jean-Philippe Rameau-to name a few-have a permanent home in the classical guitar canon and represent the musical tastes and styles of Italy, Germany, and France. These composers exemplify the various stylistic differences between the above-mentioned countries; yet, the harpsichord music of Spain is largely underrepresented in guitar collections. One of the most noteworthy Spanish harpsichordists was Padre Antonio Soler (1729-1783), who composed 120 sonatas for the instrument. When considering the ease with which some of his works transfer to the guitar, and specifically guitar duo, much can be gained by expanding the repertoire and exploring the Spanish Baroque style. The purpose of this study is three-fold: first, to present transcriptions of Antonio Soler's Sonata No. 85 and Fandango for guitar duo; second, to provide analysis of Sonata No. 85 with an emphasis on the intervallic features of the motives; third, to give an overview of the transcription process of Fandango for guitar duo while including a study of Spanish Baroque guitar and the appropriate stylistic effects drawn from its repertoire that can be incorporated in the arrangement.
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Daniel, Andrew. "Two Harpsichord Sonatas by Antonio Soler: Analysis and Transcription for Solo Guitar." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2016. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc862826/.

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There is a puacity of original works from the Baroque Era for the guitar. Transcriptions, especially music originally for harpsichord, complement the guitarist's repertoire. Dominating the priviledged space in the guitar canon, represented by Baroque transcriptions, are the composers Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel and Domenico Scarlatti. Underrepresented in the Baroque guitar canon is the music of Spanish composers, most noteworthy, the harpsichordist Padre Antonio Soler, who composed more than 120 sonatas for his instrument. Music is culturally defined and it is clear, through an analysis of the keyboard works of Soler, that his music was imbued with the salient features of his place and time. There is an implicit connection between the guitar and the non-guitar music produced in Spain as guitar gestures are part of the national emblem; this study makes an explicit connection between the harpsichord music of Soler and the modern guitar. The Spanish Baroque style, epitomized by the works of Soler, provide a clear objective for transcription. The current study produces a transcription of Padre Antonio Soler's Sonata No. R.27 and Sonata No. R.100, as well as an analysis of the sonatas to facilitate interpretation for performance and an explanation of the transcription process. The lacunae of Spanish Baroque guitar transcriptions that exists in the repertoire will be partially filled by adding Soler to the distinguished list of composers that currently inhabit the guitarists's library.
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Hartquist, John E. "Real-time Musical Analysis of Polyphonic Guitar Audio." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2012. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/808.

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In this thesis, we analyze the audio signal of a guitar to extract musical data in real-time. Specifically, the pitch and octave of notes and chords are displayed over time. Previous work has shown that non-negative matrix factorization is an effective method for classifying the pitches of simultaneous notes. We explore the effect of window size, hop length, and other parameters to maximize the resolution and accuracy of the output.Other groups have required prerecorded note samples to build a library of note templates to search for. We automate this step and compute the library at run-time, tuning it specifically for the input guitar. The program we present generates a musical visualization of the results in addition to suggestions for fingerings of chords in the form of a fretboard display and tablature notation. This program is built as an applet and is accessible from the web browser.
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Klčo, Michal. "Electric Guitar to MIDI Conversion." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta informačních technologií, 2018. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-385891.

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Automatický přepis hudby a odhad vícero znějících tónu jsou stále výzvou v oblasti dolování informací z hudby. Moderní systémy jsou založeny na různých technikách strojového učení pro dosažení co nejpřesnějšího přepisu hudby. Některé z nich jsou také omezeny na konkrétní hudební nástroj nebo hudební žánr, aby se snížila rozmanitost analyzovaného zvuku. V této práci je navrženo, vyhodnoceno a porovnáváno několik systémů pro konverzi nahrávek elektrické kytary  do MIDI souború, založených na různých technikách strojového učení a technikách spektrální analýzy.
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Serrano, Munoz Jaime Renato. "Guidelines for Transcribing Baroque Lute Music for the Modern Guitar, Using Silvius Leopold Weiss's Sonata." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/595984.

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"Guidelines for Transcribing Baroque Lute Music for the Modern Guitar, Using Silvius Leopold Weiss's Sonata 36 (from the Dresden Manuscript) as a Model" analyzes the process of creating guitar transcriptions of Weiss's music. The methodology unfolds through three steps: 1) rendering the tablature into modern guitar notation, 2) analyses of stylistic issues for the definition of fingerings on the guitar, and 3) two categories of ornamental practices—essential embellishments and diminutions. In addition, the study includes a discussion about an alternative tuning and presents a suggested prelude for Sonata 36 from the Dresden manuscript. The purpose of this research is twofold: first, to create a new guitar transcription of a sonata by Weiss, analyzing the challenges inherent in this process, and second, to train intermediate and advanced guitar students to develop their own original transcriptions following the model presented in this study.
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Bastian, Darren Bruce. "Bach Transcription for Marimba: Creating an Authentic Performance Edition of Johann Sebastian Bach's Sonata no. 1 for Violin Solo, BWV 1001, and Sonata no. 2: Grave, BWV 1003, Using Guitar and Lute Transcriptions as Models." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194020.

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Musicians have transcribed and adapted Johann Sebastian Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for Violin Solo, BWV 1001-1006, since Bach penned the works around the year 1720. Bach, himself, transcribed much of the material, adapting it for organ, harpsichord, lute, or even for his sinfonias and cantatas. It was also common for performers of the time to personalize these pieces with ornamentation, improvisation, dynamics, rhythmic interpretation, and in some cases, changes in pitch material.It is in this spirit that the author introduces marimba performance editions of Bach's Sonata no. 1 for Violin Solo, BWV 1001, and Sonata no. 2: Grave, BWV 1003, based on performances and transcriptions by guitarists and lutanists. The guitar and lute were selected as models due to their similarities to the marimba as well as the abundant resources that guitarists and lutanists have provided regarding Bach's unaccompanied string music. Their transcriptions and performances frequently include adaptations to fit their instruments' polyphonic abilities and sound characteristics. A similar approach is likewise suitable for the marimba. Thus, the present study includes an overview of Baroque performance practice as it relates to plucked-string instruments, analysis of published lute and guitar transcriptions of Bach's unaccompanied string music, and transcriptions and analysis of lute and guitar audio recordings. The plucked-string artists and scholars' approach is then assimilated into an authentic marimba performance edition of these works.
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Lang, Matthias. "Transcription of Baroque Works for Classical Guitar: J S Bach's Sonata in D Minor (Bwv 964) As Model." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2013. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc271851/.

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Continuing the common practice of composers of the Baroque period to transcribe their own or other composers' works for a different instrument, this dissertation contributes to studies of J. S. Bach's repertory as the source of program material for the classical guitar. It is from differences revealed through a comparative analysis of Bach's Violin Sonata No. 2 (BWV 1003) and his harpsichord arrangement thereof – Sonata in D minor (BWV 964) – that principles of transcription are derived and organized according to descriptive categories. Emulating the composer-transcriber with knowledge of the capabilities and limitations of the instruments involved, the arrangement procedures are applied to the classical guitar. In so doing, this study addresses the emerging challenges and complexities in creating an idiomatic arrangement.
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Amelkina-Vera, Olga Hume Tobias. "Solo lyra viol music of Tobias Hume (c. 1579-1645) historical context and transcription for modern guitar /." connect to online resource, 2008. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-9125.

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Books on the topic "Guitar transcription"

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Emmanuel, Tommy. The mystery: Transcriptions. Pacific, MO: Mel Bay Publications, 2009.

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Coryell, Larry. Jazz guitar solos: Transcriptions & adaptations from the original recordings. Milwaukee, WI: H. Leonard, 1989.

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Hendrix, Jimi. The Jimi Hendrix concerts: Authoritative transcriptions for guitar, bass and drums with detailedplayers' notes and photographs for each composition. London: Music Sales Ltd, 1991.

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Jones, Transcribed by Joff. Jack Wilkins Windows (Artist Transcription Guitar). Hal Leonard Publication, 1995.

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(Composer), Joe Pass, Kenn Chipkin (Contributor), and Aaron Stang (Editor), eds. Joe Pass On Guitar with CD (Audio) (Cpp Media Video Transcription). Warner Bros Pubns, 1996.

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Holdsworth, Allan. Just for the Curious (with CD) (Cpp Media Video Transcription Series). Warner Bros Pubns, 1994.

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Stearns, Roland Huffman-Blain. A manual of lute, vihuela, and guitar tablatures, with surveys of transcription practice, instrumental technique, and beginning pedagogy. 1986.

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Publishing, Creative Concepts. Professional Blues Guitar Transcriptions No. 3 (Professional Blues Guitar Transcriptions). Creative Concepts, 1998.

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Publishing, Creative Concepts. Professional Blues Guitar Transcriptions No. 1 (Professional Blues Guitar Transcriptions). Creative Concepts, 1998.

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Stern, Mike. Mike Stern Guitar Transcriptions. Hal Leonard Corporation, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Guitar transcription"

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Reboursière, Loïc, and Stéphane Dupont. "EGT: Enriched Guitar Transcription." In Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering, 163–68. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03892-6_19.

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Conference papers on the topic "Guitar transcription"

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Alcabasa, Lance, and Nelson Marcos. "Automatic Guitar Music Transcription." In 2012 International Conference on Advanced Computer Science Applications and Technologies (ACSAT). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/acsat.2012.78.

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Fiss, Xander, and Andres Kwasinski. "Automatic real-time electric guitar audio transcription." In ICASSP 2011 - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2011.5946418.

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O'Grady, P. D., and S. T. Rickard. "Automatic hexaphonic guitar transcription using non-negative constraints." In IET Irish Signals and Systems Conference (ISSC 2009). IET, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp.2009.1699.

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Yazawa, Kazuki, Daichi Sakaue, Kohei Nagira, Katsutoshi Itoyama, and Hiroshi G. Okuno. "Audio-based guitar tablature transcription using multipitch analysis and playability constraints." In ICASSP 2013 - 2013 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2013.6637636.

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Otsuka, Masaki, and Tetsuro Kitahara. "An on-line algorithm of guitar performance transcription using non-negative matrix factorization." In 2014 12th International Conference on Signal Processing (ICSP 2014). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icosp.2014.7015078.

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Yazawa, Kazuki, Katsutoshi Itoyama, and Hiroshi G. Okuno. "Automatic transcription of guitar tablature from audio signals in accordance with player's proficiency." In ICASSP 2014 - 2014 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2014.6854175.

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Ramos, Joao Victor, Andre Stylianos Ramos, Carlos N. Silla, and Danilo Sipoli Sanches. "Comparative Study of Genetic Algorithm and Ant Colony Optimization Algorithm Performances for the Task of Guitar Tablature Transcription." In 2015 Brazilian Conference on Intelligent Systems (BRACIS). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bracis.2015.46.

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Shibata, Kentaro, Ryo Nishikimi, Satoru Fukayama, Masataka Goto, Eita Nakamura, Katsutoshi Itoyama, and Kazuyoshi Yoshii. "Joint Transcription of Lead, Bass, and Rhythm Guitars Based on a Factorial Hidden Semi-Markov Model." In ICASSP 2019 - 2019 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2019.8682817.

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