June 30, 2026

This visualizer hit all the notes

Waveloop: What Fable left me

AI helped build a trippy music wheel, and the comments are torn between awe and side-eye

TLDR: Waveloop is a new music visualizer built with help from the AI tool Fable, and fans love how it makes songs look more meaningful instead of just flashy. In the comments, people swung between mourning Fable’s disappearance, praising its almost spooky usefulness, and snarking that the whole thing might just be an old idea with a stylish new spin.

A developer showed off Waveloop, a music visualizer that tries to show the actual shape of notes and chords instead of just making pretty bars bounce around. In plain English: it turns music into a colorful spinning wheel so you can see harmony, not just volume. But the real action? The comment section, where people were equal parts dazzled, nostalgic, confused, and just a little bit petty.

The loudest mood was "this is amazing, and also I miss Fable terribly." Several commenters treated the now-gone AI tool like a lost rock star. One person said it solved a brutal three-month bug problem in just three days. Another said it took a fuzzy, almost-impossible idea and gave it hard shape. That grief-meets-awe energy was everywhere. Then came the comedy: one reader was stunned that Fable apparently also generated a decent explainer video narrated like "a character from Dora the Explorer," which honestly says everything about the cursed, hilarious timeline we live in.

But of course, no internet unveiling is complete without a tiny academic knife fight. One skeptic basically shrugged and said this looked like an old-school sound chart in a circle, wondering how much was true invention and how much was AI doing the heavy lifting. Another commenter jokingly pretended to fully understand the musical math line about note spacing: "Yes, of course. I definitely know this." So the verdict? The crowd agrees it looks gorgeous and clever, but they’re also debating whether it’s genius, remix culture, or just very stylish math theater.

Key Points

  • The article presents Waveloop as a music visualizer built with Fable in two days.
  • Waveloop maps musical pitch classes onto a chromatic circle with 30 degrees per semitone and one full turn per octave.
  • Its main display is a spiral stacked histogram that uses color to distinguish octave ranges.
  • The author says the representation makes intervals readable as angles and chord qualities recognizable by shape, while transposition rotates the shape and inversion preserves it.
  • Waveloop primarily uses offline precomputed CQT analysis, and also includes a live microphone mode that the author says can identify ukulele chords quickly and reliably.

Hottest takes

"sounds like it's narrated by a character from Dora the Explorer" — mortenjorck
"I definitely know this" — bentobean
"just like a FFT chart in a circle" — beepbooptheory
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