yep
my extreme likes this very well...
my use to have, home audio speaker had a extra tweeter in each (4 total speakers) that did just what you said... ;-)
not all VA synths however have the output range beyond 20k if that much... in most cases it is rolled off to mask the aliasing... ION is a good example, they change the OS just to mask this, you don't have the last high octave on the synth, it repeats the lower octave on the keys...
dale
dale@...Lancaster CA
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Inquisitor Betrayer
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/7/inquisitorbetrayermusic.htmband forum
http://www.inquisitorbetrayer.com/forum/main/Angel's Wings
http://www.soundclick.com/angelswings ----- Original Message -----
From: Giblet
To: AN1x-list@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, April 16, 2005 11:25 PM
Subject: RE: [AN1x] Aliasing
<snip>In fact, adding a pair of electrostatic tweeter columns can make a day/night
difference to a pair of otherwise superb speakers. Mine respond up to 42Khz
-- way beyond human hearing -- yet they add a presence that is missing in
the titanium dome tweeters that were stock equipment. Those stock guys do
very well up to 22Khz (according to a scope and a Behringer mic). Flat and
accurate, so where does all this dramatic live-ness come from with the
electrostats? I think it's sensed pressure I hear from frequencies in the
22-28Khz range. It's obvious in any A/B test.
I've noticed that if I throw HF pink noise (in the 19K+ range) into an
ambient-type sample on the Triton, eg waterfalls, it sounds more 'real'.
<snip>
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