homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Dum dum badum dum: Google now lets you hum-search for songs -- and it actually works

Okay, how's this: nanana na na nana na nana? The Boxer by Simon and Garfunkel, obviously.

Mihai Andrei
October 23, 2020 @ 3:21 pm

share Share

It must have happened to all of us: that darn song stuck in your head that keeps coming back, but you forgot what the song is and it’s just the humming stuck in your head.

Well, there’s an app for that now: it’s called Google.

I’m a bit proud of this match percentage, not gonna lie. Screenshot from Google App.

A cure for your earworm

Google recently announced the hum-to-search feature for its mobile app, and it works pretty much as advertised: you hum, whistle, or (if you’re brave) sing a melody in the app for about 10 seconds and it tells you what the song is, along with a couple of other candidates. If you’re using Google Assistant, you can just say “Hey Google, what’s this song” and then hum the tune.

Google says the feature is available only in English on iPhone and 20 languages on Android, for now. But that seems to be the case just for the app itself — I used it to detect non-English songs successfully, despite my subpar humming skills.

The key element behind the app is a familiar one: machine learning. When you hum a melody, the machine learning model behind Google’s app transforms it into a number sequence, a digital version of your hum. It then looks through its catalog of millions of songs looking for something that fits. You can hum any part of the song, it doesn’t need to be the beginning or the chorus, everything works. You can even hum a part of the instrumental.

You also don’t need to have a good singing voice, the algorithm seems to do a good job anyway, although humming closer to the actual song definitely helps with ID-ing the song.

So does it actually work?

I tried it. To be honest, I played with the app a bit more than I’d care to admit. You know, for testing purposes, for science. Here’s how it worked for me.

First, I tried playing it a Youtube song and use it like Shazam. It worked, no hassle. I then tried humming songs that had “nanana” parts, like The Boxer, or Scooter’s Maria, and that also worked. I moved on to a bunch of popular songs, and without fail, it identified them — even when I purposely hummed a bit out of tune. I then tried to move to niche and non-English songs and here too, it performed admirably, although it wasn’t able to identify all songs. As far as I can tell, rap seems to be its weak point, perhaps because there are fewer distinguishable musical elements.

To sum it up, it seems to work well. It’s not a big deal in any real way, but it’s a feature that we all wanted at some moment and, well, here it is. It’s pretty fun when technology actually delivers, isn’t it?

share Share

If you use ChatGPT a lot, this study has some concerning findings for you

So, umm, AI is not your friend — literally.

Miyazaki Hates Your Ghibli-fied Photos and They're Probably a Copyright Breach Too

“I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself,” he said.

Bad microphone? The people on your call probably think less of you

As it turns out, a bad microphone may be standing between you and your next job.

This AI Tool Can Scan Your Food and Tell You Exactly How Many Calories and Other Nutrients It Has

Knowing what's inside your food has never been so easy.

Astronauts Can Now Print Metal in Space and It’s a Game Changer for Future Missions

ESA’s metal 3D printer aboard the ISS could revolutionize space exploration by enabling self-sufficient missions.

This Tiny Robot Swims Like a Worm — and Could Explore Alien Oceans

Marine flatworms have perfected smooth, undulating motion over millions of years of evolution. Now, scientists have taken inspiration to create a highly agile robot.

Sam Altman said it was "hopeless" for smaller AIs to compete with OpenAI. DeepSeek proved him wrong

It’s hard to overstate just how impactful DeepSeek has been. In a couple of days, it rattled the entire AI industry, shattering the aura of invincibility that OpenAI (and American tech companies in general) had built around themselves. DeepSeek’s new AI is the number one most downloaded free app on the Apple Store, and it’s […]

A paralyzed man just piloted a virtual drone using his brain

This new brain-computer interface offers a glimpse into the future for millions with motor impairments.

Single-Crystal Batteries Could Power EVs for Millions of Miles

A battery with this technology has been constantly charging and discharging for 6 years and it's at 80% of capacity.

Godfather of AI says there's a 10-20% chance AI wipes out humanity in 30 years

AI could bring an industrial revolution-level change, but at what cost?