Magenta is a research project exploring the role of machine learning in the process of creating art and music. Primarily this involves developing new deep learning and reinforcement learning algorithms for generating songs, images, drawings, and other materials. But it's also an exploration in building smart tools and interfaces that allow artists and musicians to extend (not replace!) their processes using these models. Magenta was started by some researchers and engineers from the Google Brain team, but many others have contributed significantly to the project. We use TensorFlow and release our models and tools in open source on this GitHub. If you’d like to learn more about Magenta, check out our blog, where we post technical details. You can also join our discussion group.
This is the home for our Python TensorFlow library. To use our models in the browser with TensorFlow.js, head to the Magenta.js repository.
Getting Started
Take a look at our colab notebooks for various models, including one on getting started. Magenta.js is also a good resource for models and demos that run in the browser. This and more, including blog posts and Ableton Live plugins, can be found at https://magenta.tensorflow.org.
Magenta Repo
Installation
Magenta maintains a pip package for easy installation. We recommend using Anaconda to install it, but it can work in any standard Python environment. We support Python 3 (>= 3.5). These instructions will assume you are using Anaconda.
Automated Install (w/ Anaconda)
If you are running Mac OS X or Ubuntu, you can try using our automated installation script. Just paste the following command into your terminal.
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/tensorflow/magenta/master/magenta/tools/magenta-install.sh > /tmp/magenta-install.sh
bash /tmp/magenta-install.sh
After the script completes, open a new terminal window so the environment variable changes take effect.
The Magenta libraries are now available for use within Python programs and Jupyter notebooks, and the Magenta scripts are installed in your path!
Note that you will need to run source activate magenta
to use Magenta every
time you open a new terminal window.
Manual Install (w/o Anaconda)
If the automated script fails for any reason, or you'd prefer to install by hand, do the following steps.
Install the Magenta pip package:
pip install magenta
NOTE: In order to install the rtmidi
package that we depend on, you may need to install headers for some sound libraries. On Ubuntu Linux, this command should install the necessary packages:
sudo apt-get install build-essential libasound2-dev libjack-dev portaudio19-dev
On Fedora Linux, use
sudo dnf group install "C Development Tools and Libraries"
sudo dnf install SAASound-devel jack-audio-connection-kit-devel portaudio-devel
The Magenta libraries are now available for use within Python programs and Jupyter notebooks, and the Magenta scripts are installed in your path!
Using Magenta
You can now train our various models and use them to generate music, audio, and images. You can find instructions for each of the models by exploring the models directory.
Development Environment
If you want to develop on Magenta, you'll need to set up the full Development Environment.
First, clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/tensorflow/magenta.git
Next, install the dependencies by changing to the base directory and executing the setup command:
pip install -e .
You can now edit the files and run scripts by calling Python as usual. For example, this is how you would run the melody_rnn_generate
script from the base directory:
python magenta/models/melody_rnn/melody_rnn_generate --config=...
You can also install the (potentially modified) package with:
pip install .
Before creating a pull request, please also test your changes with:
pip install pytest-pylint
pytest
PIP Release
To build a new version for pip, bump the version and then run:
python setup.py test
python setup.py bdist_wheel --universal
twine upload dist/magenta-N.N.N-py2.py3-none-any.whl