R: [PD] resonant comb filter series

Davide Morelli info at davidemorelli.it
Sun Feb 27 17:34:47 CET 2005


Hi,

I recently used the principles shown here by Derek Holzer in a live
performance,
a lecture of the 6th book of the Odissea (Nausicaa)
mp3 excerpt available at http://www.davidemorelli.it/04/odissea.mp3
sources: https://puredata.info/Members/dmorelli/patches/

Thank you Derek.

davide.


> -----Messaggio originale-----
> Da: pd-list-admin at iem.at [mailto:pd-list-admin at iem.at]Per conto di derek
> holzer
> Inviato: martedì 15 febbraio 2005 17.48
> A: pun chik
> Cc: PD-List
> Oggetto: [PD] resonant comb filter series
>
> A comb filter is simply a very short delay with a high amount of
> feedback. It is so short that it's length becomes an oscillating
> waveform. Try making a simple [delwrite~ delayname] and a [vd~
> delayname]. Now make a feedback loop by connecting the [vd~ delayname]
> back into the [delwrite~ delayname], and multiply this by a number less
> than 1. Something between .9 and .99 will give you a good ringing sound.
> The output of the [vd~ delayname] also gets sent out to the [adc~] for
> you to hear.
>
> Divide the samplerate by the frequency you want the comb filter to
> resonate at, then divide by 1000 to get the delay length to send to the
> [vd~ delayname]. It would be good to put your [delwrite~] and [vd~]
> objects in a subpatch with a [block~ 1] object, which sets the blocksize
> to 1 and allows for the shortest possible delay times [which in turn
> gives you the highest possible resonant frequencies].
>
> To make a resonant series, make multiple instances of this [as
> abstractions, don't forget to use $0 in the "delayname"!], and send the
> base frequency to the first comb filter abstraction, and multiplications
> or divisions of that to subsequent "harmonic" subpatches. Integers
> [2,3,4...] will produce clean harmonics, while other numbers [.98, 1.34,
> 2.22...] will be detuned to various degrees, resulting in an acoustic
> "beating" phenomenon as waveforms amplify and cancel each other out.
>
> The same audio input is sent to all the comb filters. Sharp, percussive
> sounds will "ring" the filters, giving you a plucked-string kind of
> sound. Continuous sounds give something like a guitar or sitar type of
> drone. Try changing the multipliers of the "harmonic" filters for
> different drone or tonal effects.
>
> All in all, I find it is much better for people to understand the
> principles of how these things work, so building your own will be great
> practice! Google for "karplus-strong" for more technical/mathmatical info.
>
> Good luck,
> derek
> >





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