Sheet music is pretty rare to come by for any VN / video game / anime / whatever medium. If there isn't an officially licensed music book or something, you're probably out of luck.
One option is to transcribe it yourself! I've used this program in the past. As with all transcriptions, the more instruments involved then the less intelligible it'll get for a single piano, so sometimes there just isn't a solution (you'll have way more luck with A New World than Perfect Sky). Hopefully it works out for you.
Thanks for your feedback! Regarding the CQT–the reason I haven't used it yet is that the inverse version of the transform doesn't appear to be in librosa mainline (just the forward one), which means I wouldn't be able to actually get the audio signal back out...
That said, there's a (supposedly) working implementation of the ICQT here, so I'm hoping to try incorporating that at some point. AnthemScore has a really compelling graphic showing the advantages of CQT vs. STFT for their task of note-recognition, so it seems like getting CQT working would probably be worthwhile here as well.
Regarding passing in waveforms–I haven't tried that yet. I guess that could enable a more convincing reconstruction (with sample-level accuracy), but I'm not sure how I would incorporate it... maybe with a WaveNet-like architecture on the output side (and skip connections from the input), I guess? Not sure how to attack that 😣
not a plugin for fl studio
but I was able to run https://www.lunaverus.com/ AnthemScore 4
and overcome error "Cannot run in virtual machine" by using https://github.com/hfiref0x/VBoxHardenedLoader/blob/master/Binary/linux.md
There are programs out there that can convert audio files to sheet music notes. It does comes with limitations and errors but it can give you some good information to go on. I've used AnthemScore with some good results, you can give it a try for free, it might solve your current problem.
unfortunately i don't know of a transcription of this. but i can say that this is the best opportunity imaginable for you to learn to do it. the point is you have a tune you really want to understand. it takes that kind of motivation to make you get through the process.
there's no magic bullet, you just have to do it and gradually it will get easier. but there are some tools that can help, like these
https://magenta.tensorflow.org/onsets-frames
https://www.seventhstring.com/xscribe/overview.html
the main tool, however, remains the grey stuff between the ears ...
Oh I see what you mean.
You're looking for something that'll analyze audio and convert it to notation.
Have you tried this?
At the very least you can try out the trial.
What are you trying to decode from the track exactly? Pitch, rhythm, timbre, EQ, something else?
First just load it up in your DAW, try to figure out the BPM and look at the spectrum in EQ 8 or something like that.
To separate out parts, there's https://ezstems.com/ - this works best on simple drum/bass/guitar/singer type tracks, results with EDM might be unpredictable but give it a shot.
I don't have the best ear for pitch so sometimes I load up a file in AnthemScore: https://www.lunaverus.com/ - this gives you a heatmap of pitch over time, I usually ignore the sheet music it generates and just look at the heatmap.
That is Songsterr. The audio is Songsterr's synthesizers.
Most likely, the tab was made using Guitar Pro and then uploaded.
So far there isn't a great option for auto tabbing.
After a fast google search I found this one AnthemScore that can supposedly do what you are asking. There is a 30 days trial, maybe you can use it.
Otherwise, if the song is on youtube, you can use chordify.net, it will show you just the chords, but it's still something. You can just google the name of the youtube video + the word "chords" and you will get a direct link to a chordify page, then you press play.
There is a comparison of all the software I've seen that do this here: https://www.lunaverus.com/compare
It was compiled by the creators of anthemscore, so don't take it uncritically, they may have picked samples that favored their software over others.
There is software like AnthemScore. Is it decent? There's a free trial so try it out. https://www.lunaverus.com/download
I tried it out and it was pretty good at some stuff and pretty bad at other stuff.
> It was not my intention to sound "agressive"
No worries, I didn't take it as aggressive. Your concerns are reasonable :)
In any case, I stumbled across some software that works surprisingly well (https://www.lunaverus.com/) and after tweaking the output of that software manually I have a pretty good transcription of a third of the song. I think I should be able to figure the rest of it out on my own, and one I'm finished I'll post it online for others to use.
Sorry it didn't work out, but if I have things I can't transcribe on my own in the future I can reach out to you over PM if you're interested.
Here's a rough transcription I made using an automated transcription tool, AnthemScore. (I'd recommend checking it out; it's really good.)
If I feel like it, I might go through and make the transcription actually good. Tell me what you think.
http://www.mediafire.com/folder/uki6r6luhaked/Joy%2C_Hope%2C_And_Peace
Sounds like one instrument. You can try AnthemScore and convert it into sheet music. https://www.lunaverus.com/
If that doesn't work you can do what I did. Find someone on freelancer to transcribe the song for $10. People on fiverr are charge a lot more.
Unfortunately I can't find it either, fortunately it sounds quite easy to transcribe so try your luck over at /r/transcribe.
Edit - another thing you can do is run it through a music transcription software (most have free trials) and work out any resulting kinks manually, saving a lot of effort. Anthemscore is one made by a redditor
Good point. I just updated the download page with licensing info. (It's free to try for 30 days. After that you can purchase an activation code which lets you use it forever on up to 3 computers, for either personal or commercial use.)