TarsosDSP is a Java library for audio processing. Its aim is to provide an easy-to-use interface to practical music processing algorithms implemented, as simply as possible, in pure Java and without any other external dependencies. TarsosDSP features an implementation of a percussion onset detector and a number of pitch detection algorithms: YIN, the Mcleod Pitch method and a “Dynamic Wavelet Algorithm Pitch Tracking” algorithm. Also included is a Goertzel DTMF decoding algorithm, a time stretch algorithm (WSOLA), resampling, filters, simple synthesis, some audio effects, and a pitch shifting algorithm.
To show the capabilities of the library, TarsosDSP example applications are available. Head over to the TarosDSP release directory for freshly baked binaries and code smell free (that is the goal anyway), oven-fresh sources.
Head over to the TarsosDSP release repository and download the latest TarsosDSP library. To get up to speed quickly, check the TarsosDSP Example applications for inspiration and consult the API documentation.
TarsosDSP is also published in the main Maven repository. This makes it easier to use TarsosDSP in Maven projects.
TarsosDSP contains some ready made example applications. Most have a Java Swing user interface. They show which functionality is present in the library and how to use it.
- SoundDetector show how you loudness calculations can be done. When input sound is over a defined limit an event is fired.
- PitchDetector this demo application shows real-time pitch detection. When pitch is detected the hertz value is printed together with a probability.
- PercussionDetector show the percussion (onset) dectection. Clapping your hands causes an event. This demo application also shows the influence of the two parameters on the algorithm.
- UtterAsterisk a game with the goal to sing as close to a melody a possible. Technically it shows real-time pitch detection with YIN or MPM.
- Spectrogram in Java shows a spectrogram and detected pitch, either live or from an audio file. It is interesting to see which frequencies are picked as fundamentals.
- Goertzel DTMF decoding an implementation of the Goertzel Algorithm. A fancy user interface shows what goes on under the hood.
- Audio Time Stretching – Implementation in Pure Java Using WSOLA an implementation of a time stretching algorithm. WSOLA makes it possible to change the play back speed of audio without changing the pitch. The play back speed can be changed at any moment, even when there is audio playing.
- Audio Feature Extraction a command line application to do simple feature extraction.
- Audio Synthesis a command line application to do simple audio synthesis.
- Pitch Shifting an example application that does pitch shifting, either in real-time on a microphone input, or on recorded audio. Also included is a command line application to do pitch shifting.
If you want to build from source, or want to improve TarsosDSP follow the instructions below. Contributions to TarsosDSP are more than welcome, if you have a an algorithm to add or find a bug, do not hesitate to send me a message.
TarsosDSP is in the transition between Apache Maven and Apache Ant and currently supports both. The instructions below detail how you can build from source. Which build system you use is upto you. I find Ant a bit simpler. When everything runs correctly you should be able to run all example applications and have the latest version of the TarsosDSP library for inclusion in your projects. Also the Javadoc documentation for the API should be available.
To you need Apache Ant and git installed on your system. The following commands fetch the source and build the library and example jars:
git clone https://JorenSix@github.com/JorenSix/TarsosDSP.git
cd TarsosDSP
#link the source files at the expected locations
test -f src || ln -s TarsosDSP/src/main/java/ src
test -f examples || ln -s TarsosDSPExamples/src/main/java/ examples
test -f tests || ln -s TarsosDSP/src/test/java tests
cd build
ant tarsos_dsp_library #Builds the core TarsosDSP library
ant build_examples #Builds all the TarsosDSP examples
ant javadoc #Creates the documentation in TarsosDSP/doc
To build from source, you need Apache Maven and git installed on your system. The following commands fetch the source and build the library and example jars:
git clone https://JorenSix@github.com/JorenSix/TarsosDSP.git
cd TarsosDSP/TarsosDSP
mvn install #Builds the core TarsosDSP library
mvn javadoc:javadoc #Builds the javadoc for TarsosDSP library
cd ../TarsosDSPExamples
mvn install #Builds all the TarsosDSP examples
The library is separated to 2 projects: TarsosDSP (main core) and TarsosDSPExamples (examples). They have different POM’s and are built independently.
TarsosDSP/src
contains the source files of the core DSP libraries.TarsosDSP/test
contains unit tests for some of the DSP functionality.TarsosDSP/target/site/apidocs
contains help documentation for DSP libraryTarsosDSP/target
contains MAVEN build files.TarsosDSPExamples/src/main
contains a couple of example applications with a Java Swing user interface.TarsosDSPExamples/target
contains builded versions example applications.build
contains ANT build files. Either to build Java documentation or runnable JAR-files for the example applications.
To make development with eclipse easy, symlink the following and make them source files in your TarsosDSP eclipse project.
test -f src || ln -s TarsosDSP/src/main/java/ src
test -f examples || ln -s TarsosDSPExamples/src/main/java/ examples
test -f tests || ln -s TarsosDSP/src/test/java tests
Tarsos and TarsosDSP are developed at University College Ghent, Faculty of Music
http://cons.hogent.be
The onset detector implementation is based on a VAMP plugin example by Chris Cannam at Queen Mary University, London. The method is described in Drum Source Separation using Percussive Feature Detection and Spectral Modulation by Dan Barry, Derry Fitzgerald, Eugene Coyle and Bob Lawlor, ISSC 2005.
For the implementation of the YIN pitch tracking algorithm. Both the the YIN paper and the aubio implementation were used as a reference. Matthias Mauch (of Queen Mary University, London) kindly provided the FastYin implementation which uses an FFT to calculate the difference function, it makes the algorithm up to 3 times faster.
The Average Magnitude Difference (AMDF) pitch estimation algorithm is implemented by Eder Souza and adapted for TarsosDSP by myself.
For the MPM pitch tracking algorithm, the paper titled A Smarter Way To Find Pitch by Philip McLeod and Geoff Wyvill was used.
The Dynamic Wavlet pitch estimation algorithm is described in Real-Time Time-Domain Pitch Tracking Using Wavelets by Eric Larson and Ross Maddox. The implementation within TarsosDSP is based on the implementation in the Dynamic Wavelet Algorithm Pitch Tracking library by Antoine Schmitt, which is released under the MIT open source licence.
The audio time stretching algorithm is described in An Overlap-Add Technique Based on Waveform Similarity (WSOLA) For Hight Quality Time-Scale Modifications of speech by Werner Verhelst and Marc Roelands. As a reference implementation the WSOLA implementation by Olli Parviainen in the SoundTouch – an open-source audio processing library was used.
The FFT implementation used within TarsosDSP is by Piotr Wendykier and is included in his JTransforms library. JTransforms is the first, open source, multithreaded FFT library written in pure Java.
The sample rate conversion feature is implemented by Laszlo systems in the libresample4j library. libresample4j is a Java port of Dominic Mazzoni’s libresample 0.1.3, which is in turn based on Julius Smith’s Resample 1.7 library.
Various FFT window functions are done by Damien Di Fede and Corban Brook for the GPL’d Minim project.
Beat induction based on onsets and saliences is done using code from Simon Dixon’s BeatRoot system the algorithm is documented in the 2001 JNMR paper Automatic Extraction of Tempo and Beat From Expressive Performances and in the 2007 JNMR article Evaluation of the Audio Beat Tracking System BeatRoot
A complex domain onset detection function is implemented using Aubio as an inspiration. Aubio, by Paul Brossiers contains very clean object oriented c-code, the cleanest c-code I have ever seen. The algorithm is described in Complex Domain Onset Detection for Musical Signals by Christopher Duxbury, Mike E. Davies, and Mark B. Sandler, in Proceedings of the Digital Audio Effects Conference, DAFx-03, pages 90-93, London, UK, 2003
An implementation of the Constant-Q transform by Karl Helgason for the RasmusDSP project has been adapted for use in TarsosDSP. References:
Judith C. Brown, Calculation of a constant Q spectral transform, J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 89(1): 425-434, 1991.
Judith C. Brown and Miller S. Puckette, An efficient algorithm for the calculation of a constant Q transform, J. Acoust. Soc. Am.,Vol. 92, No. 5, November 1992
Benjamin Blankertz, The Constant Q Transform
First release which includes several pitch trackers and a time stretching algorithm, amongst other things. Downloads and javadoc API can be found at the TarsosDSP release directory
Changed how the audio dispatcher stops. Added StopAudioProcessor.
Added FastYin implementation by Matthias Mauch
Added AMDF pitch estimator by Eder Souza
Modified the interface of PitchDetector to return a more elaborate result structure with pitch, probability and a boolean “is pitched”.
Added an implementation of an envelope follower or envelope detector.
TarsosDSP can do audio synthesis now. The first simple unit generators are included in the library.
It has a new audio feature extraction feature, implemented in the FeatureExtractor example.
Added ASCII-art to the source code (this is the main TarsosDSP 1.3 feature).
Included a resample feature, implemented by libresample4j. Together with the WSOLA implementation, it can be used for pitch shifting (similar to Phase Vocoding). A pitch shifting example (both with a CLI and a UI) is added in the 1.4 version of the TarsosDSP library as well.
Converted TarsosDSP to maven. This is known as the Malaryta-release. The “Malaryta” release is provided to you by RikkiMongoose (idea, documents, git things) and Ultar (converting to maven, refactoring). Malaryta is the capital of Malaryta Raion, Brest Region in the Republic of Belarus. Both of developers spent their childhood in Brest, and think that title Malaryta is as strange as Ubuntu or Whistler. The 1.5 release also includes various FFT window functions from the cool Minim project by Damien Di Fede.
This release features practical onset and beat detection algorithms. A complex domain onset detection and a spectral flux onset detection algorithm are added. This release also includes a way to guess a beat from onsets. Parts of the BeatRoot system, by Simon Dixon, are included to this end. Also included in this release is an implementation of the Constant-Q transform.