Thursday, November 12, 2009

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Feedback Control of Musical Instruments

Most structural engineers seek to prevent structural vibrations, instrument builders seek to create sustained structural vibrations.


A nice quote from "Feedback control of Musical Instruments" by Edgar J. Berdahl, G¨unter Niemeyer, Julius O. Smith III.

116 pages. Filled with too many ordinary differential equations, transfer functions and root locus plots for light reading. But if you want some cutting edge ideas about feedback control, the CCRMA thinktank delivers again.


Highlights:

Graphtech makes some bad ass sensors that could be used for termination based control. The first time I've seen that concept. But its possible to put sensors and actuators at the end of the string.

Most types of sensor/actuator will be done digital. This will introduce some type of delay and will cause phase problems. The whole notion of simply adding a microphone and speaker to increase feedback, will probably not sound the way one expects.

Certain types of string activators will result in inharmonic series coming out of the strings.

Magnetic actuators (aka ebow) and more are a nice way to sustain the tone. Magnet activated strings are boring to look at, but magnets provide a nice way to sustain a tone.

Charles Besnainou was footnoted a few times in this paper.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Rebuilding Instruments from The Monochord

The inventors are coming are popping up around the world.

Cybernetic monochords are going to be the big lobster mobster for the next two years.

Here is a nice paper talking about different methods of control.

https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~eberdahl/Papers/STANM120.pdf

Some quick thoughts:
+ Big props to the research team. Julius Smith is everywhere.
+ Groovy monochord pictures toward the end
+ Bode graphs will become the new eye candy for Electronic musicians
+ Are Magnetic actuators better than mechanical pluckers?
+ Can PID control be stable with better error correction?
+ Where do I buy neodydmium futures?

A proper reading and write-up is do on this one.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Old School Music Just Got Older

First post! Researchers in Germany unearthed the oldest musical instrument. Dating back 35,000 years it showcases how long music has been a part of our culture.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8117915.stm

Friday, April 10, 2009

Wall Mounted Strings played from Radioactive Readings

Beautiful use of wall mounted strings. Not a fan of using radioactive decay. But the whole thing is visually stunning.


The Small Within the Great sound installation from Barrie James Sutcliffe on Vimeo.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Acoustic /modular Guitar Synth

The era of mutable acoustic instruments continues.

A research at MIT created a guitar with a replacable sound board. He sets up a few piezos
on the sound board. Those piezos are send to a dsp card. As you change the sound board, you get a new tone. Sone sound boards include 150 year old wood form a Vermont bridge, and a container based sound board. The container board can be filled with liquids.

http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/03/chameleon_guitar_takes_on_many_tone.html