[sdiy] Stupid Sheppard Generator Question

Jim Johnson jamos at technotoys.com
Thu Sep 26 20:32:56 CEST 2002


>In essence you have a number of oscillators one octave appart (1 V) in a
>slowly rising (or falling) sawtooth. For each oscillator you have a VCA
control
>voltage wich rises and falls (triangle) such that you have full power half
>the way up in pitch. 

The dictum to use sines 1 octave apart is directed at a "classic" Shepard
effect, which has a simple timbre; but variants are interesting too. I used
to use the Xpander's 6 voices to do a Shepard-like tone, by using identical
voices with an LFO sawtooth controlling VC pitch, and offsetting the phase
angle of each LFO by 60 degrees. The tracking generator is used to derive
an properly aligned triangle wave from the sawtooth, which drives the VCA.
The sound does infinitely rise or fall in pitch, but the timbre varies
somewhat in time with the sweep. If the sweep is really slow, this is
acceptable, but this slows the rate of pitch change as well, so very deep
pitch modulation may be required (which the Xpander could not handle well,
IIRC) to get the desired effect.




Jim Johnson 
jamos at technotoys.com





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