Music lessons in a pandemic: How one Edmonton company is offering AI-led music courses - Action News
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Edmonton

Music lessons in a pandemic: How one Edmonton company is offering AI-led music courses

To make up for difficulties aspiring musicians face in not being able to attend lessons in person, AI Music Lessons uses artificial intelligence to teach music.

The idea was created for beginners who can't attend private lessons during COVID-19

Greg Burlet, founder of the Edmonton-based A.I. music service Frettable, created music lessons that are led by artificial intelligence for beginners to take while at home. (Supplied by Greg Burlet)

Greg Burlet realized that physical distancing rules during the COVID-19 pandemic could create problems for private music lessons.

Because many aspiring musicians can't attend lessons in person, the Edmonton developer created AI Music Lessons, an app that uses artificial intelligence to teach music.

AI Music Lessons were created by Burlet who's also the president and founder of Frettable, an AI music transcription service.

It uses the microphone on a laptop or tablet to listen in on a user's playing, then offers immediate feedback on which notes were played effectively, where timing was off and which parts should be practiced at a slower speed.

"It's intended for beginners, so it will teach you everything from how to hold your instrument to how to play Wonderwall on the guitar, so you can play it on your balcony and get the attention of the girl or guy next door," Burlet saidMonday on CBC'sEdmonton AM.

The app offers courses or tutorials on how to play individual songs for guitar and bass, with plans to offer courses soon for piano as well.

Many private music lessons have moved to online video chat services during the pandemic, using apps like Zoom, Skype or Google Hangouts. But Burlet said those can createproblemswith latencywhen instructors are listening over a video call rather than in person.

His app isn't meant to replace music teachers with computer instruction, Burlet said.

"It's meant to be a supplemental practice tool so you can really dig into specific exercises and songs and just continue learning from home," he said.

"A lot of people still really value one-on-one instruction, and a lot of people are completely fine with self-directed learning. So it kind of depends on what you're comfortable with."

Frettable offered the music lessons for free from May to July and helped host the International Blues Camp for Kids, which was forced to move online this year.

Students learned the fundamentals of playing blues music on guitar and bassbefore meeting online through Zoom to play together and show what they'd learned.