special effect
Romeo_Fahl at stream.com
Romeo_Fahl at stream.com
Tue Aug 22 16:49:36 CEST 2000
If you can find a copy, Check out Yellow Magic Orchestra's BGM album, on
the track "Loom". Very dizzying. Like bedspins without the booze.
Magnus Danielson <cfmd at swipnet.se>@node12b53.a2000.nl on 08/22/2000
12:27:57 AM
Sent by: owner-synth-diy at node12b53.a2000.nl
To: J.Proveniers at orga.nl
cc: synth-diy at node12b53.a2000.nl
Subject: Re: special effect
From: Jeroen Proveniers <J.Proveniers at orga.nl>
Subject: special effect
Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2000 08:32:49 +0200
> Hello,
Hi!
> A few years ago I read in an article about some weird effect, probably
named
> after its inventor, that gives the illusion of an endlessly rising tone.
It
> worked by 'cutting and pasting' higher harmonics to lower. I'm curious
how
> that sounds and how it's actually made.
It's the Shepards tone. It it the continous form of a little game that Bach
played with discrete notes many, many years ago. The Shepards tone consist
of
a number of sines (8 has occured) spaced evenly out 1 octave away. These
tones
either rises or falls. The amplitude of a sine is raised as the sine is
approaching the middle, and then the amplitude is reduced as it passes away
from the middle. Modulation wise you have a sawtooth for oscillator CV and
a
triangle (with the same period time, in sync with each other) as the VCA
expo
CV signal. Paia at least used to have a kit for creating these waveforms.
Also, as I recall it, the description for it also said alot about the
theory.
I don't have a sample around but if you where here I would play a test CD
containing it.
Cheers,
Magnus
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