![]() Check out Google’s Magenta Lo-Fi Player here and Google’s Music Week on Inside Guide here. Laurent is a musician who studied at a conservatory in France and worked in music for 10 years. This isn’t Google’s first fun music experiment. We were very excited to get the invitation to bring Blob Opera to I/O with new features, says Laurent Gaveau, who’s the head of Google Arts & Culture lab. The blobs don’t simply play samples of their voices, rather the machine learning model’s understanding of what opera singing sounds like. ![]() Together and with help from you and technology they form an opera. They are part of a machine learning experiment created by David Li and brought to us through his collaboration with Google Arts and Culture. The machine learning model was created by David Li and trained on 16 hours of singing from four opera singers: tenor, Christian Joel, bass Frederick Tong, mezzo‑soprano Joanna Gamble and soprano Olivia Doutney. What is Blob Opera Take a look at the image above. Here you can select from 8 popular Christmas Carols. You’ll see a playlist icon in the lower right corner. Active Christmas mode to don the Santa hats and let the snow fall. Once you’ve got used to the basics, hit record to share your creations with friends. ![]() Silence any blob by simply clicking the mute swich above their head. Drag forwards and backwards to sing different vowels. Pitches stick to a scale, so there are no wrong notes. Simply drag the different blobs up and down to alter pitch as they all sing along in perfect harmony. It’s easy to get started creating your choir. ![]() Using machine learning Blob Opera replicate a four piece opera choir. Image Credit: Google Prepare to waste hours of your day with Google’s latest experiment.
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