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François Couperin – Concerts Royaux (A corpus of annotated scores)

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https://zenodo.org/record/15027239
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This is a README file for a data repository originating from the DCML corpus initiative and serves as welcome page for both the GitHub repo https://github.com/DCMLab/couperin_concerts and the corresponding documentation page https://dcmlab.github.io/couperin_concerts For information on how to obtain and use the dataset, please refer to this documentation page. François Couperin – Concerts Royaux (A corpus of annotated scores) This corpus of annotated MuseScore files has been created within the DCML corpus initiative and employs the DCML harmony annotation standard. It represents 14 concerts composed by François Couperin (1668-1733) and the trio sonata Apothéose de Corelli. In the 1710s Couperin started to compose a series of Concerts which were performed first 1714/15 at Sunday concerts for king Louis XIV. Later he published four of them as Concerts Royaux together with the Troisième livre of the Pièces de Clavecin in 1722, whereas the concerts nos. 5–14 were published as Les Goûts-réünis ou Nouveaux Concerts together with the Apothéose de Corelli in 1724. The concerts are written for a melody instrument and figured bass but can also be performed as Harpsichord pieces or with added middle voices; some of those were given by the composer. The detailed basso continuo figures (except nos. 12 and 13) allow a quite exact harmonic annotation considering some research about French basso continuo practice. These annotations will provide considerable support to future quantitative study of Baroque harmony, major-minor tonality, the use of the rule of the octave, cadences and schemata. -- Prof. Johannes Menke Getting the data download repository as a ZIP file download a Frictionless Datapackage that includes concatenations of the TSV files in the four folders (measures, notes, chords, and harmonies) and a JSON descriptor: couperin_concerts.zip couperin_concerts.datapackage.json clone the repo: git clone https://github.com/DCMLab/couperin_concerts.git Data Formats Each piece in this corpus is represented by five files with identical name prefixes, each in its own folder. For example, the first Prélude of the first concert has the following files: MS3/c01n01_prelude.mscx: Uncompressed MuseScore 3.6.2 file including the music and annotation labels. notes/c01n01_prelude.notes.tsv: A table of all note heads contained in the score and their relevant features (not each of them represents an onset, some are tied together) measures/c01n01_prelude.measures.tsv: A table with relevant information about the measures in the score. chords/c01n01_prelude.chords.tsv: A table containing layer-wise unique onset positions with the musical markup (such as dynamics, articulation, lyrics, figured bass, etc.). harmonies/c01n01_prelude.harmonies.tsv: A table of the included harmony labels (including cadences and phrases) with their positions in the score. Each TSV file comes with its own JSON descriptor that describes the meanings and datatypes of the columns ("fields") it contains, follows the Frictionless specification, and can be used to validate and correctly load the described file. Opening Scores After navigating to your local copy, you can open the scores in the folder MS3 with the free and open source score editor MuseScore. Please note that the scores have been edited, annotated and tested with MuseScore 3.6.2. MuseScore 4 has since been released which renders them correctly but cannot store them back in the same format. Opening TSV files in a spreadsheet Tab-separated value (TSV) files are like Comma-separated value (CSV) files and can be opened with most modern text editors. However, for correctly displaying the columns, you might want to use a spreadsheet or an addon for your favourite text editor. When you use a spreadsheet such as Excel, it might annoy you by interpreting fractions as dates. This can be circumvented by using Data --> From Text/CSV or the free alternative LibreOffice Calc. Other than that, TSV data can be loaded with every modern programming language. Loading TSV files in Python Since the TSV files contain null values, lists, fractions, and numbers that are to be treated as strings, you may want to use this code to load any TSV files related to this repository (provided you're doing it in Python). After a quick pip install -U ms3 (requires Python 3.10 or later) you'll be able to load any TSV like this: import ms3 labels = ms3.load_tsv("harmonies/c01n01_prelude.harmonies.tsv") notes = ms3.load_tsv("notes/c01n01_prelude.notes.tsv") Version history See the GitHub releases. Questions, Suggestions, Corrections, Bug Reports Please create an issue and/or feel free to fork and submit pull requests. Cite as Johannes Hentschel, Yannis Rammos, Markus Neuwirth, & Martin Rohrmeier. (2025). François Couperin – Concerts Royaux (A corpus of annotated scores) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/{{ concept_doi }} License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).
创建时间:
2025-03-14
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