[maxmsp] Re: A little pole/fm challenge for you.
Nicholas C. Raftis III
Dynamicell at hotmail.com
Sat Sep 1 11:37:05 MDT 2007
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oh heheh this may be why nobody else responded and why I had a skewed vision of what this actually is: "Caution: Old Macs may produce noise." At any rate if you read that description now taht IM listening on an intel its totally different and this is a complex model that your not going to get through fm or anything else for that matter, its a complex algorythm made from scratch which does exactly what it says. This name is an invention, but this is how it works. There are n poles (3-64), which are attracted by force to their neighboor. By increasing the number of poles, the computed sound gets more complex with a lot of harmonics, where the waveform oscillate itself by the pole forces. If you be patient and try out some combination you can find some very nice atmospheric sounds. The amplitude between the poles is cubic interpolated. Note: Changing the poles count affects crack sounds, since the waveform resets without respect to any zero crossings. Tipp: You can click the slider bar to change the poles count without sliding. Update: Added rate parameter, which affects the speed of each pole. -- -=ili!ili=- www.Axiom-Crux.net -=ili!ili=-
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