[Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Dave Malham
'Ambisonics - Component Imaging for Audio' -- next part -- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20130623/db7161e6/attachment.html ___ Sursound mailing list Sursound

Re: [Sursound] Testing left, center, right...

2013-06-23 Thread Martin Leese
Eric Carmichel wrote: Over the months, I?ve read a couple of posts asking whether it is possible to extract or synthesize surround channels from binaural stereo or non-Ambisonic surround formats. I am now attempting to do something that would appear to be simpler and more straightforward:

Re: [Sursound] Testing left, center, right...

2013-06-23 Thread Eero Aro
Maybe the next one should also be mentioned once again, although it is a rather unorthodox method. John Whiting used Ambisonic panning and decoding in the Electric Phoenix live performances. He normally used four speakers in a rectangle, but once he had problems with the placement of the rear

Re: [Sursound] Testing left, center, right...

2013-06-23 Thread David Pickett
At 16:13 23/6/2013, Martin Leese wrote: Others have mentioned Trifield. The definitive paper for this is: M.A. Gerzon, Optimum Reproduction Matrices for Multispeaker Stereo, J. Audio Engineering Society, vol. 40 no. 7/8, pp. 571-589 (1992 July/Aug.) There are two complementary papers on this

Re: [Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Gerald Wilson
Department of Music The University of York Heslington York YO10 5DD UK 'Ambisonics - Component Imaging for Audio' -- next part -- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20130623/db7161e6

Re: [Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Richard G Elen
On 23/06/2013 21:22, Gerald Wilson wrote: they had settled on that terminology after some debate and apologised for mixing Greek and Latin roots; but Felgett pointed out that a precedent had been set by the term television, which in a grammatically pure world would be called either

Re: [Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Gerald Wilson
Good point. Maybe he was apologising for NOT mixing Greek and Latin roots... (It was a long time ago...) GWW On 23 Jun 2013, at 21:42, Richard G Elen wrote: On 23/06/2013 21:22, Gerald Wilson wrote: they had settled on that terminology after some debate and apologised for mixing Greek and

Re: [Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Aaron Heller
and Power, vol. 19, no. 20, pp. 492–494, 1973. -- next part -- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20130623/f2a16c5d/attachment.html ___ Sursound mailing list Sursound

Re: [Sursound] a query

2013-06-23 Thread Richard G Elen
On 23/06/2013 21:56, Aaron Heller wrote: The term Ambisonics does not appear at all in Fellgett's 9/72 article [1], but is in the title in 11/73 [2]. The term Periphony incidentally was around in early 1973: M.A. Gerzon, Periphony: With-Height Sound Reproduction, J. Audio Eng. Soc., vol. 21,