Other Attempts at Music Morphing

There are lots of "music morphing" out there but very little of it is music morphing according to our definition of the term. The following is what we have found that qualifies.

Rene Wooller, QUT
Rene Wooller at Queensland University of Technology has a nice music morphing system, with video and all!
http://runtime.ci.qut.edu.au/pivot/entry.php?id=16#body

IBM
IBM has conducted research on music morphing. The displayed results fullfill the criterion of convergence (see definition of Music Morphing). How it sounds in the actual morph in between source and target you can judge for yourself at http://domino.research.ibm.com/Comm/bios.nsf/pages/morphdemo.html

IRCAM/Finale
One melodic morphing solution has been developed at IRCAM in Paris. It has been included in versions of the music notation software Finale of FinaleMusic. When communicating with IRCAM in 2003 we learned that the IRCAM solution only morphs single-note melodies and that regardless of input the generated music will contain one note duration only (the whole pieces will consist of all quarternotes or all eightnotes or all sixteenthnotes or...) and that the solution has no harmonic intelligence.

Jonathan Berger
We know nothing about this effort, except for what is on this link:
http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/~brg/research/morph/morph.html

Japanese
An abstract from
Music and Computer: http://www.ipsj.or.jp/members/SIGNotes/Eng/18/2000/039/article005.html