Kids In The Hall

We went to see The Kids In The Hall at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. The original quintet was there to parade old sketches and favourite characters, such as Simon Milligan and the Pit of Ultimate Darkness. All in all, a good show by a bunch of funny guys.

It’s strange. For a bunch of guys with an original comedy act, they disappeared into obscurity after the series ended in 1995. With the possible exception of Dave Foley, who went on to lead “News Radio” and land a number of roles doing voice work for animated movies, none of the others really seemed to do that much. I suppose in a lot of ways they were probably victims of their own success. After being such well known faces on the CBC, making the transition into the gigantic wading pool of American television might have required a whole new set of skills that perhaps they didn’t possess. Or maybe they just didn’t want to play that game.

That aside, the Kids are still a force to be reckoned with, judging by the welcome they received at the hand of the capacity crowd. Given the legions of fans, you’d think they’d reunite for good and replace some of the mindless drivel polluting the TV these days.

Music & XML

At the moment, the recording industry is focusing all of its efforts on controlling the future of digital music and its distribution. In focusing on suppressing music piracy, I believe the music industry has overlooked another, equally important, area of the music industry: electronic music by-products. I define ‘music by-products’ as pieces of information which create value from an original piece of music by transforming the original work into another usable representation. “Electronic music by-products” refer to music by-products which can be represented in a format suitable for electronic transmission or storage.

For example, despite the popularity of the “Titanic” soundtrack song “My Heart Will Go On”, not all of Celine Dion’s royalty capital for the song was derived from CD, video, or tape sales. An additional portion of her royalties came from other music-related sources, including: sheet music (in a variety of forms, from full conductor scores to amateur pianist sheet music), MIDI-based backing tracks for karaoke, and elevator “musak”. The nature of these music by-products is intriguing: all of these by-products contain essentially the same information. This similarity could prove useful in allowing record companies to tailor content to the needs of a specific consumer, and market its music by-products to a “market of one”.

Fortunately, such a format and mechanism has already been created: XML, and XSL. XML (eXtensible Markup Language) provides a standard for defining a data markup language similar in form to HTML, and its more complex parent, SGML. Unlike HTML, XML documents do not specify the representation details for data. Representation details for an XML document are delegated to another standard: XSL (eXtensible Stylesheet Language). An XSL document defines a representation for each element that an XML document contains. By using different XSL documents, the same XML document can be transformed into many different representations.

By taking advantage of the transformational capabilities of XML/XSL, recording companies could potentially cater to the specific needs of an individual customer. Consider the possibilities:

  1. Extract the melody of the lyrics, convert it to a standard musical staff output, along with the lyrics. This form of output would be especially useful to vocalists, or possibly vocal jazz choirs.
  2. Convert all note, instrument, tempo, and time signature information into a standard MIDI format. This form of output would be useful for backing solo vocalists, or providing elevator music.
  3. Selectively convert note and chord information into a fake-book style music sheet. This form is useful to both jazz and other musicians as a short form of describing ‘standard’ songs. Additional processing could extract melody lines, or riffs for more detailed annotation in the fake sheet.
  4. Generate a MIDI-based karaoke binary file, complete with lyrics and synchronization information required to create the ‘bouncing ball’ used by the vocalist.
  5. Extract drum note information, producing a binary format suitable for download into a drum machine.
  6. Allow transformation of the arrangement to a specific orchestral configuraton. For example, transforming a orchestral piece into sheet music suitable for a high school band (violin parts become clarinet parts, etc.)
  7. Create “easy piano” or “easy guitar” arrangements, complete with piano/chord fingerings above the lyrics or complete chord charts at the end.
  8. The ability to transform a song’s style, converting a popular hit into a reggae version, or a heavy-metal song into a jazz standard.

Consider some of the essential elements common to all of these by-products: tempo, time signature, note information, title, artist. In addition, consider some differences: presence or absence of lyrics, key of an instrment responsible for particular note information. The total of this information provides all of the data required to render the song’s content in a particular format; all we need is a format for containing this data, and a mechanism to transform the data into a particular representation.

Already, amateur musicians have tools at their disposal to create transformable electronic music by-products. For example, two amateur guitarists at Sun created a utility called ChordPro, which converts text files in a specific format into a standard lead-sheet. An on-line catalog of these text files, OLGA (On Line Guitar Archive), recently had to close public access to its archives, due to a legal dispute with the Harry Fox Agency over royalties.

The demand for music by-products is currently outsourced to industry-specific production houses. With XML, the opportunity exists for recording companies to take over this part of the music consumer market, without incurring large production costs. Consider the possibility: a web-based service where customers can select the type of representation for a popular song and have it delivered instantly.