Welcome to Polifonia
Visit the Polifonia Portal and discover the soundtrack of our history
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Polifonia makes this happen by building novel ways of inspecting, representing, and interacting with digital content.
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Memory institutions, scholars, and citizens will be able to navigate, explore, and discover multiple perspectives and stories about European Musical Heritage.
Pilots
The history of pipe organs is rich and diverse, and highly interrelated to economic, religious and artistic contexts. Currently, the information about building practices and characteristics of ~2000 Dutch…
Bell structures are widespread both in urban and rural areas. They contribute to the distinctive shape of a landscape, defining its soundscape and playing as markers of daily, festive and ritual times.…
In order to answer research questions, musical heritage scholars need to combine diverse datasets ranging from music scores, audiovisual material to metadata. They need to identify similar entities…
Music libraries currently lacks well-founded information retrieval tools. While it is relatively easy to find music based on metadata, content-based music retrieval still remains as a challenge. The Facets…
Tonalities is developing tools for the modal-tonal identification, exploration, and classification of monophonic and polyphonic notated music from the Renaissance to the twentieth century. This pilot has…
The digital music collection of the Meertens Instituut (Amsterdam) includes thousands of melodies from Dutch popular culture, spanning a period of more than five centuries. To trace possible international…
In 2006 Bologna was declared by Unesco “City of Music”. Despite this, the extraordinary musical heritage of this city is kept in cultural institutions and archives, studied by a few specialized scholars…
This pilot will build a knowledge graph of the historical experience of music in childhood, using life writing (letters, diaries, memoirs, travel writing) and other historical texts as sources for adult…
This pilot focuses on supporting music historians and teachers by providing a Web tool that enables the exploration and visualisation of encounters between people in the musical world in Europe from c.1800…
Pilot summary The ACCESS Pilot will develop new ways to enhance participation and engagement in music: for the general public; for those with hearing impairments; and for those with physical disabilities.…
Other outputs
Polifonia Portal
BELLS Knowledge Graph
Bells’ Knowledge Graph
Discover More →Pitchcontext
A Python Module for Melodic Analysis using Weighted Pitch Context Vectors.
Discover More →ORGANS Knowledge Graph
The ORGANS Knowledge Graph
Discover More →TUNES Knowledge Graph
The TUNES Knowledge Graph
Discover More →MOZ
Muziekopnamen Zendgemachtigden (Dutch Broadcast Concert Collection)
Discover More →MELODY
Make me a Linked Open Data story
Discover More →Polifonia Knowledge Extractor
The Polifonia Knowledge Extractor is software that allows the extraction of knowledge from text.
Discover More →MusicBO Knowledge Graph
The Knowledge Graph about the role of Bologna in the European musical landscape.
Discover More →JAMS Ontology
The JAMS Ontology
Discover More →Harmory Knowledge Graph
The Harmonic Memory Knowledge Graph
Discover More →Roman Chord APIs
APIs for the Roman Chord Knowledge Ontology
Discover More →Roman Chord Ontology
The Roman Chord Ontology
Discover More →Music Meta ontology
An ontology to describe music metadata
Discover More →Annotation of the Polifonia Corpus
Data, annotation and interrogation of the Polifonia Corpus.
Discover More →Polifonia Lexicon
A multilingual lexicon about music.
Discover More →MEETUPS Ontology
The MEETUPS Ontology module for MEETUPS PILOT
Discover More →MEETUPS Knowledge Graph
The MEETUPS knowledge graph
Discover More →BELLS
Explore italian cultural soundscapes through the historical bells heritage
Discover More →Frequently Occurring Patterns
Patterns Knowledge Graph
FoNN: FOlk N-gram aNalysis
SPARQL Anything
SPARQL Anything is a system for Semantic Web re-engineering that allows users to … query anything with SPARQL
Discover More →Tonalities
An Online Collaborative Annotation Interface for Music Analysis.
Discover More →Polifonia Corpus
Online text analysis tool for linguistic interrogation of Polifonia’s multilingual diachronic corpus.
musoW
The catalogue of music data on the web
Discover More →CLEF
A Linked Open Data native system for Crowdsourcing
Discover More →LHARP
Local Harmonic Agreement based on Recurrent Patterns
Discover More →ChoCo Knowledge Graph
The Chord Corpus
Discover More →Recent News
Are you the type of musician that is inspired by old sounds, such as cheerful Irish folk melodies, the majestic resonance of pipe organ concerts, and the timeless chimes echoing from century-old Italian bell towers? Then ‘Polifonia Song Contest’ is your challenge!
Are you the type of musician that is inspired by old sounds, such as cheerful Irish folk melodies, the…
The Polifonia project formally ended on April 30, which means that the tools and software developed within this 4-year-project are released and ready for use. Today we look at ‘Patterns UI’.
The Polifonia project formally ended on April 30, which means that the tools and software developed…
Polifonia Song Contest is two weeks in, and will continue for another two weeks. Have you downloaded the sample pack yet?
With two weeks to go until the deadline, the “Polifonia Song Contest” beckons all musicians who find…
The consortium is preparing for the last face-to-face consortium meeting of the Polifonia project in April 2024.
The consortium is preparing for the last face-to-face consortium meeting of the Polifonia project in…
Polifonia is known for its strong links with academia and is pleased to present some highlights in its involvement in research and associated conferences.
Polifonia is known for its strong links with academia and is pleased to present some highlights in its…
In 2024, Paul Mulholland, Naomi Barker and Paul Warren (The Open University, U.K) are continuing their experiment investigating how different kinds of music influence the appreciation of an artwork; and to what extent the same kind of sense-making processes are used when viewing artwork and when listening to music. To do this, the researchers are looking for more participants. They have now automated the process so that participants can complete the experiment online without the involvement of an experimenter.
Music instrument with music notes on white background illustration In 2024, Paul Mulholland, Naomi…
During the last project meeting, the Polifonia consortium extensively discussed how to foster the impact of the project in academia and beyond. How to make the output of Polifonia sustainable after the lifetime of the project is one important aspect. But fostering re-usability does not end by long-term preservation of certain assets (such as data and tools). In Polifonia Research Ecosystem – Impact of a project. A webinar on Data re-use and workflows, we will discuss how we ensure that more fluid assets such as interfaces, but also experiences in setting up and executing workflows via those interfaces, become reproducible and reuseable.
During the last project meeting, the Polifonia consortium extensively discussed how to foster the impact…
For the Polifonia project, the Central Institute for Cataloging and Documentation (ICCD) of the Italian Ministry of Culture is carrying out activities on the historical bell heritage. The ICCD has also initiated a process of documentation of the practices and knowledge associated with bell production through collaboration with historical Italian foundries.
The bell casting process performed by the Pontifical Marinelli Foundry. Photo courtesy of ICC For…
Playing the soundtrack of our history
From the soundscape of Italian historical bells, to the influence of French operas on traditional Dutch music, European cultural heritage hides a goldmine of unknown encounters, influences and practices that can transport us to experience the past, understand the music we love, and imagine the soundtrack of our future. Polifonia will organise this journey by using ten pilot use cases as drivers, addressing preservation, management, study, and interaction with musical heritage.
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This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement N. 101004746