On 8/12/06 11:57, Peter Connelly wrote: (Fairlight "ARR1" choir/voice sample) > 1) This is how I believe it to be. Maybe Peter Vogel can elaborate on > this one? Is he here as well? Wow! Yes, that would be great. > It is a breathy sample, probably a characteristic of her > voice. Some voices are breathy by nature are and maybe only a portion of > the recording was used, missing out the attack possibly? It was 8 bit > and I believe this sample was on the original Fairlight CMI Series I > Factory Discs which had a very small sampling bandwidth. I doubt this > was recorded in studio / lab conditions and if she sung into it again, > wouldn't quite be the same. Maybe a fluke which got captured and > remembered forever. You've got some very good points there, Peter. But I'm still not convinced that this is a real, unedited human voice. Or is it just that the early Fairlight CMI transforms the sound so much that it no longer is (more or less) an identical copy of the source input? Here's that voice again (ARR1) which I had on a Fairlight CMI IIx audio sample-CD I bought a few years ago: http://home.c2i.net/w-460389/fairlight_examples/Fairlight_ARR1.mp3 Now, for comparison, here's a choir sample from an Emulator II (I believe I found it at the Hollow Sun website a while back -can't find it there now): http://home.c2i.net/w-460389/fairlight_examples/Emulator_choir_D4.mp3 That definitely sounds like a human choir! Another Emulator II choir sample: http://home.c2i.net/w-460389/fairlight_examples/emulator_choir_G2.mp3 And finally another Fairlight voice sample from that same audio-CD: http://home.c2i.net/w-460389/fairlight_examples/Fairlight_real_female_voice.mp3 The last sample also sounds a bit strange, but at least here it sounds like a human voice, albeit a low-quality recording. I've read a lot about the Fairlight on the web, using Google. But not many sites go into detail. They usually just explain what the Fairlight is, but not having one myself I'm curious (especially in relation to the ARR1 sample) about the filters, editing abilities etc. to try and find out if any of this has contributed to that special sound quality. For example, using the light-pen and the graphic editing capabilities, could a normal human voice be transformed? No website I've come across actually explains what that 3D graphic window is, neither what you can actually do with a Fairlight, but I'm guessing that part of what can be done is raise/lower the various frequencies of a sound. Perhaps the higher frequencies (the "airy" part) of the voice has been raised or something like that.... Please excuse my ignorance. > Just about anyone can > get setup in this day and age, with very little outlay. In those days, > it was different, so people that got into it, yearned to do it and had > the drive, talent and creativity to make it work. It also took a lot > longer to produce a record in those days. If you compare the capabilities of the Fairlight back in those days with today, what kind of currently available hardware/software would that be to emulate those functions/capabilities? Obviously you can do CD-quality audio sampling with just about any computer today, and of course the dedicated hardware samplers out there, but I've heard that the Fairlight can do so much more. Can someone explain to me what those things are? > I'm not sure if you're aware, but there are a few other variants of > Fairlight. Series I, II, IIx and III. The III being the most technically > advanced and way ahead of any technology at that time. yes, I've read about them all, though I've never had a chance to see/try out any of them. Seeing the specs of the series III, isn't this more or less what many modern samplers are capable of, meaning that it's still not an outdated sampler, but fully usable as any modern sampler? I suppose the difference is cost, whereas today you can get many of the same specs for a fraction of the cost back then. regards, Hallvard
Message
Re: [Fairlight-CMI] Re: Fairlight beginner questions
2006-12-18 by Hallvard Tangeraas
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.