I don’t understand why you explicitly want to visualize the frequencies if you’re already able to read (and write) sheet music. I mean, learning a tune from the frequency graph seems quite awkward compared to learning from the score… a fairly trained musician should be able to sing straight from the score without ever having heard the original (I can, at least for tonal music). If you can write the sheet yourself, or if you have a suitable MIDI file, the simplest thing you can do is to get Musescore and repeatedly playback the song.
I haven’t had any practice in reading sheet music in like 3 years, and even then I was a novice and was quite slow at it. And I’ve never tried transcribing music in sheet form but I think I can, especially given a tuner, although it’ll take long.
In this case I recommend trying to automate the transcription process. You could use something like piano2notes (yet another AI browser tool) in order to get the midi/transcript directly from the mp3 file.
I’ve never used such services before today, but I’ve just checked the quality with a sample mp3 tune written on the fly in Musescore and it seems quite good (at least for tonal music with very recognizable melodies). Here’s the result:
I don’t understand why you explicitly want to visualize the frequencies if you’re already able to read (and write) sheet music. I mean, learning a tune from the frequency graph seems quite awkward compared to learning from the score… a fairly trained musician should be able to sing straight from the score without ever having heard the original (I can, at least for tonal music). If you can write the sheet yourself, or if you have a suitable MIDI file, the simplest thing you can do is to get Musescore and repeatedly playback the song.
I haven’t had any practice in reading sheet music in like 3 years, and even then I was a novice and was quite slow at it. And I’ve never tried transcribing music in sheet form but I think I can, especially given a tuner, although it’ll take long.
In this case I recommend trying to automate the transcription process. You could use something like piano2notes (yet another AI browser tool) in order to get the midi/transcript directly from the mp3 file.
I’ve never used such services before today, but I’ve just checked the quality with a sample mp3 tune written on the fly in Musescore and it seems quite good (at least for tonal music with very recognizable melodies). Here’s the result:
IMAGE (original score above, automated transcription below)
There’s also a free service called soundslice that declares to be optimized for use cases like yours, but I didn’t check it.