Really really difficult, and maybe not possible for many years to come.
Someone recently posted a link to Terence Tao on mathematical notation. Much the same problem. Notation is hard. Indeed I reckon notation is one of the most difficult problems we have.
That said, visualising Music is kinda like musicalising Art. Possible but not necessarily useful. Synesthesia is one way to deal with it, but is hugely reliant on very human perception and kinda iffy (not knocking those who can experience synesthetically, more suggesting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Is_It_Like_to_Be_a_Bat%3F).
A general theory of correspondence of meaning and notation is still unavailable, notwithstanding a vast amount of research in the field. If you can make any useful contribution at all you are worthy of historical recognition.
I've been thinking about this stuff for decades, and can only recommend Charles Saunders Pierce as a good beginning for the modern mind.
Someone recently posted a link to Terence Tao on mathematical notation. Much the same problem. Notation is hard. Indeed I reckon notation is one of the most difficult problems we have.
That said, visualising Music is kinda like musicalising Art. Possible but not necessarily useful. Synesthesia is one way to deal with it, but is hugely reliant on very human perception and kinda iffy (not knocking those who can experience synesthetically, more suggesting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Is_It_Like_to_Be_a_Bat%3F).
A general theory of correspondence of meaning and notation is still unavailable, notwithstanding a vast amount of research in the field. If you can make any useful contribution at all you are worthy of historical recognition.
I've been thinking about this stuff for decades, and can only recommend Charles Saunders Pierce as a good beginning for the modern mind.