Microsoft Research Songsmith |
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Original author(s) | Microsoft Research |
Developer(s) | Microsoft Research |
Stable release | 1.02 / September 2009 |
Written in | C# and C++ |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows |
Platform | .NET Framework |
Size | 100MB download |
Available in | English |
Type | Music Software |
License | Proprietary |
Website | Songsmith |
Microsoft Research Songsmith is a musical accompaniment application for Microsoft Windows, launched in early 2009. Songsmith immediately generates a musical accompaniment after a voice is recorded. The user can adjust tempo, genre (such as pop, R&B, hip-hop, rock, jazz, or reggae), and overall mood (e.g. to make it happy, sad, jazzy, etc.).[1]
The software was developed by a team at Microsoft Research, led by researchers Dan Morris and Sumit Basu.[2][3][4] The product began as a research project called MySong, conducted at Microsoft Research in collaboration with a University of Washington student, Ian Simon, in the summer of 2007. Songsmith is the second commercial project from Microsoft's Microsoft Research, after AutoCollage.[5]
Morris and Basu starred in an infomercial[6] that became a viral video.[7][8][9][10][11][12] The video was featured on The Gruen Transfer as a competitor for the Worst Ad Ever.[13]
The release of the software spawned an internet meme where the vocal tracks of popular songs are fed into the program.
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