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Reverb Design is about creating an aesthetic appealing spacial impression aimed at sweetening the listening experience for a given context. | Reverb Design is about creating an aesthetic appealing spacial impression aimed at sweetening the listening experience for a given context. However, the ambiguity of auditory and visual cues in reproduced sound makes it necessary to create an auditory illusion<ref>A.S. Bregman. Auditory Scene Analysis: The Perceptual Organization of Sound. MIT Press, 1990.</ref>. To make this illusion work, an aesthetic concept of simplicity and intelligibility is proposed based on psychoacoustic facts and recording practice. A development kit for Pd is presented to encourage reverb design from a “bird's eye view”, with complete reverberation algorithms as basic building blocks. An example topology complements previous work<ref>U. Schlemmer. Ambience - representation of spatial impression through the simulation of source image models with 5 or 8 loudspeak- ers. Master’s thesis, University of Music and perf. Arts Vienna, 2006.</ref><ref>U. Schlemmer. How do we perceive early re- flexions ? - some notes on the directivity of music instruments. VDT international Convention, November 2006.</ref> with diffuse reflections and late reverberation. | ||
However, the ambiguity of auditory and visual cues in reproduced sound makes it necessary to | |||
create an auditory illusion | |||
A development kit for | |||
work | |||
[[Media:Schlemmer reverb.pdf]] | Download: [[Media:Schlemmer reverb.pdf]] | ||
===References=== | |||
<references /> | |||
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Revision as of 16:18, 3 July 2011
Reverb Design
Author: Urban Schlemmer
Abstract
Reverb Design is about creating an aesthetic appealing spacial impression aimed at sweetening the listening experience for a given context. However, the ambiguity of auditory and visual cues in reproduced sound makes it necessary to create an auditory illusion[1]. To make this illusion work, an aesthetic concept of simplicity and intelligibility is proposed based on psychoacoustic facts and recording practice. A development kit for Pd is presented to encourage reverb design from a “bird's eye view”, with complete reverberation algorithms as basic building blocks. An example topology complements previous work[2][3] with diffuse reflections and late reverberation.
Download: Media:Schlemmer reverb.pdf
References
- ↑ A.S. Bregman. Auditory Scene Analysis: The Perceptual Organization of Sound. MIT Press, 1990.
- ↑ U. Schlemmer. Ambience - representation of spatial impression through the simulation of source image models with 5 or 8 loudspeak- ers. Master’s thesis, University of Music and perf. Arts Vienna, 2006.
- ↑ U. Schlemmer. How do we perceive early re- flexions ? - some notes on the directivity of music instruments. VDT international Convention, November 2006.
4th international Pure Data Convention 2011 Weimar ~ Berlin