Okay, here are some thoughts on modules that change harmonic spacing. For a modifier, what about something that basically does what a ring modulator does (but not through simple multiplication obviously)---change the spacing between harmonics plus or minus---but along a controllable curve. Is that clear? I'm fumbling for language here. A ring modulator ends up expanding or contracting the harmonic spacing in a linear way, and because pitch has an exponential relationship to frequency, we get the weird metallic non-harmonic sound. What if you could do something similar, but with "curves" that could be voltage-controllable? As well as the deviation amount? Hope that description makes some kind of sense. Due to the nature of a ring modulator, the higher harmonics in the upper sideband get affected more than the "closer" ones, and the reverse for the lower sideband. If you could control the effect along a curve, you could really control the effect and make it very subtle. At close to exponential I think it would approximate a pitch shifter. At linear, it would create the upper sideband of a ring mod, and inverse linear, the lower. For an additive source module, I guess some kind of high-frequency VCO that feeds, say, eight "divide-by-N" chains that can divide by large numbers. Each of these eight chains goes to a VCA and a square-to-sine waveshaper and are then mixed. These modules could be ganged to add more harmonics off the same source VCO (or maybe the HF VCO is one module, like a 'driver,' and there's a second module for the divider banks that can all be fed from one driver). I realize that this gets to be a lot of circuitry. Probably more expensive than eight VCOs. But with these things feeding off the same clock they are locked tight in "tune." Ideally you'd want to be able to specify the phase of each harmonic, too, but that's getting to be crazy. Anyway, that's first pass at daydreaming. I wonder what that first module would sound like. I bet it would be a very weird choruser if used subtly and mixed back in with the original signal. Sorry for all these long, dry emails folks. Just trying to keep the mental juices flowing, get some hopefully new ideas out there on the table.
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Partially Mad
2000-03-22 by Tkacs, Ken
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