Are there any audio fingerprinting libraries written in Java? similar to libofa which was written in C++ or C#.
3 Answers
This open source project called musicg can help you
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I have been thinking about checking this out. Anyone done so already?– While-EJul 1, 2012 at 19:27
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I have recently checked out musicg's
FingerprintSimilarityComputer
. It seems to work well for comparing a full song to a section of itself but doesn't cope (at least out-of-the-box) with noise in one of the recordings. Apr 4, 2014 at 23:59
See this question.
phash isn't written in java, but has java bindings, so it can be called from java.
Audio Fingerprinting
Audio fingerprinting permits the identification of unlabelled audio, regardless of the format it is delivered in, or certain signal distortions it may have endured as a result of compression, filtering, transmission, etc. The unknown audio signal is identified via a compact representation of its spectral characteristics that is compared against all records in a reference database. MusicURI makes use of the MPEG-7 standard (formally known as the Multimedia Content Description Interface), which defines a universal mechanism for exchanging multimedia-related descriptive data, and has defined the Audio Signature Description Scheme as its audio fingerprinting tool, for the purpose of robust identification of audio signals.
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2do you think one of these could be used successfully with musicbrainz db ? or with freedb– ClaudiuApr 3, 2010 at 15:58
There are many libraries for Audio Fingerprinting. Unfortunately most of them are not in Java. Most of them are in C or python. You can search for AcoustID, pHash, jHears, Echoprint.