I've seen discussion about use of the Electro-Harmonix Talking Machine effect pedal. The Talking Machine moves between two vowel sounds, or allows fixing upon just one.
A wah pedal also allows moving the frequency, or of just moving the pedal to one position and leaving it there. However, even though it sounds similar to a human voice, it doesn't quite get there.
So, what's the problem?
The problem is that a normal wah pedal only has one filter peak... while the human voice has more than one peak for any given vowel, called "formants." Those peaks in a human voice stay the same, even when a person moves the pitch up and down. The pitch comes from the vocal cords, but the resonances come from other parts of the vocal tract, including the tongue and how open one's mouth is.
Although there are more than two formants for any given vowel, two is enough to make a vowel unmistakeable.
The Talking Machine actually has two wah envelope filters. (An envelope filter is a filter which moves from one setting to another based on how loud a sound is. With a plucked string, the volume envelope, or shape, starts loud and then moves down to nothing. With the filter moving along with the envelope, and with the loudest setting being an "aaa" and the softest setting being an "ooo," you'll get an "aaaooow" with the plucking of a string.) Although a normal single envelope filter will get something like a vocal sound, the Talking Machine really nails it.
The Talking Machine also has a setting where the filters stay in the same place. There's a few videos (including the imcomparable Amethyste's) using the Talking Machine for a male tenor voice.
Talking machines are expensive, though, and you're paying not just for a pair of fixed filters, but for the presets which turn two formant filters into paired moving formants to simulate human vowel movement. That can be pricey.
However, you don't have to spend that much if you're only going to be doing a couple of vowels.
Two cascading Q-Zone pedals, which are each a fixed wah (non-moving, other than setting the knob), can be set up to cascade, one into the other. The first box will be set to the higher formant, and the second box to the lower of the two formants. The second box will have more of an audible effect, being as it filters down the spike of the higher formant, just as the lower formant is louder than the higher in the human voice.
So, how to choose the frequencies?
I normally do it by ear, find setting the second box inline, and then going back to the first and dialing it in. However, the Wikipedia page on formants lists combinations of frequencies for various vowels.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formant
I also thought the following was interesting, although I have the mechanical aptitude of a gorilla with a hammer and a hardboiled egg. *laugh* This section of the page on formants (great reading, incidentally) includes a proposed dual wah pedal, a Talking Pedal instead of an automatic Talking Machine.
http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folders/wahpedl/wahped.htm#twowahs
I imagine that using two parametric filters with adjustable Q (width of the peak of the filter) would also let one do formants, but I haven't tried this myself.
Adding a little bit of reverb can smooth out the edges on these sounds, adding just the right kind of resonance to really make it gel.
Of course, the richer the sound of your instrument, the more there is for the filter to work on. A pure sine wave voice might need a fuzz pedal before heading into the filters.
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In addition to using fixed wahs, I also regularly use effects/multieffects like the Electro-Harmonix POG2 (multiple octave generator, along with a filter), the Korg PX5D (which has both a fixed wah and a fixed filter, as well as many other effects, all in the size of a cassette tape), and the Boss ME-50B (quite a few filter options, and an amazingly versatile pedal which, although designed for bass, I use regularly as a "synth" pedal for guitar).
Now I'm jazzed to ask a friend of mine, with more soldering skills than my non-existent ones, to build me a pedal with two fixed wahs or resonant filters in sequence. I figure I can mark the formant settings around the knobs with permanent color marker, so I can look down and see the pairings and easily set them on the fly. I have a small shelf attached to the mic stand upon which the instrument is mounted, so it would be close at hand.
(Now that I'm thinking about it, the PX5D's second filter (in the modulation section) is just a fixed frequency low pass filter with no resonant peak, but I suspect that by using TALk 4 ("yeah") and setting the sensitivity to its most sensitive, I can get the lower resonant peak, while using the Vox Fixed Wah in the section feeding to get the first formant's resonant peak. Either that, or I can use FILTUP2 for a resonant peak. That would allow all this in a multieffect I already have on the small shelf mounted on my mic stand.)
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Anyone else doing filter experiments?