why? the interpolation noise is what makes it sound so unique, so crunchy
I am just noticing Jamal's note in this long thread.
*I actually agree with this!!*
What seems like a bug or annoyance at first
can actually turn out to have creative effect.
I have some spoken-word audio which is
On 06/29/2015 06:22 AM, Peter P. wrote:
All this sounds surprisingly complicated for a very common task, that is
reading audio data in normal quality from tables larger than 32k.
reading audio data in normal quality from tables larger than 32k is
indeed a common task.
however, upsampling a
Hi Claude, list,
* Claude Heiland-Allen cla...@mathr.co.uk [2015-05-30 14:01]:
On 30/05/15 18:37, Peter P. wrote:
I am aware that interpolation noise and aliasing are different things,
How long is your table?
Could it be quantization of the index causing the issue?
Thank you for your
* IOhannes m zmölnig zmoel...@iem.at [2015-06-29 01:10]:
On 06/29/2015 06:22 AM, Peter P. wrote:
All this sounds surprisingly complicated for a very common task, that is
reading audio data in normal quality from tables larger than 32k.
reading audio data in normal quality from tables
hey
Is there any way how to reduce the interpolation noise? Could I use a
low-pass filter whose cutoff frequency I could adapt wrt. playback
speed?
why? the interpolation noise is what makes it sound so unique, so
crunchy, without LP and especially at very sloow playback. with a
good analog
In my experience, you get the best sounding results when using samples
recorded with a high samplerate (96kHz), instead of resampling.
cheers,
jan
On 05/31/2015 01:06 PM, jamal crawford wrote:
hey
Is there any way how to reduce the interpolation noise? Could I use a
low-pass filter whose
Theoretically you should use a brickwall lowpass at one half the playback
sample rate.
So practically a multipole lowpass at a lower frequency than that.
Martin
On Sat, May 30, 2015 at 1:37 PM, Peter P. peterpar...@fastmail.com wrote:
Dear list,
this has been discussed already, but I would
* Miller Puckette m...@ucsd.edu [2015-05-30 13:55]:
I think the playback patch should be at whatever rate the dac is running at,
and in this case filtering won't fix teh problem.
The patch itself runs at dac speed, in it there is a oversampling
subpatch. Do you suggest that this is oversampling
Dear list,
this has been discussed already, but I would need a best-practice
advice.
I am trying to play back a 44.1kHz sound file with tabread4~ at very
slow speed. I do get interpolation noise in the higher audible range of
course. Now I tried to resamples the sound file to 96kHz, place it in