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In this paper, I trace the converging interests of IRCAM and its collaborators as they seek to build a general system that allows users to "manipulate audio/music contents through high-level specification, designed to match the human cognitive structures involved in auditory perception" (Vinet et al. 2002, p. 197). At the same time, I track diverging applications of the system in academic versus popular contexts; the former includes compositional uses in the computer- assisted orchestration program Orchids (now Orchidea), while the latter includes a range of so-called "audio-fingerprinting" applications, such as automatic song identification and speech recognition. By mapping connections between scientific discourses and sonic practices circulating within (and without) the CUIDADO project, my research sheds light on a web of intellectual, cultural, material, and economic factors that contributed to the emergence of a new audio metadata standard and cemented its status as part of a global information infrastructure. The paper concludes by considering the perceptual technics underpinning this conjuncture of tendencies, drawing attention to their historical and cultural specificity as a way of questioning assumptions around music and the pursuit of universal sonic knowledge.