![]() # create a mixture so one dance isn't next to another. # Probably machine-learning something to ID dances and # Could you do that with computers? Definitely. # Scoop up all the music you put in a folder and ordered I commented my very inefficient, could definitely be much better, bash code below to try to illustrate how this worked. And lo, of course, if I’ve got an audio thing to do, ffmpeg is the one to do it!įfmpeg is so cool, and lots of StackOverflow/StackExchange questions helped me out. I’ve used ffmpeg often in conjunction my livecode music to prep field recordings (taken as video) into audio I can use in a set. So one of the teachers spends time custom-making these playlists, where the songs are only ~2-3 minutes long, and then it moves onto the next. Every Friday, we have a social dance.Īt a social dance, we put on a playlist, but you don’t want to use regular Spotify or the like if you can avoid it … people are often dancing with folks they don’t know, and four minutes is a long time (most songs are between three and five minutes … and could be more!) to dance to one song. ![]() While doing something completely not-tech for a while, I’ve been teaching partner dancing at a local studio.
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