I find electronic enhancement to be much "easier to control" where by using acoustics you are constrained in how nature wants to behave. It can be very frustrating." - Christopher in this thread
My comments on this thread were because I really liked the sound.. Yes - it would obviously be far more convienient if THAT sound came direct from a theremin or electronic effects unit..
But it didnt! You say it came from a rubber bucket! ... With this bucket you have managed to create a (IMO) vocal sound which is better than the vocal sounds I have been able to produce using analogue circuitry, and IMO mor pleasant (probably because of the imprecision) than vocal sounds I have heard from the TM or other digital formant filters / modifiers.
IMO, many electronically produced sounds are enhanced by some form of acoustic resonator -
But I have never heard any simple resonator impart such rich vocal qualities (the only resonators I have heard that do this were some experimental resonators at medical school, which were anatomically correct duplicates of the human vocal system - and that was more than 30 years ago, so I really cannot remember how the sounds compare ;-)
Dont be like me! - You have something which sounds amazing - dont go off and try to modify this.. or at least, not until you have photographed it, filmed it, documented it and fully recorded it... Its up to you whether you choose to publish this so that others can benefit..
But I hope that you do! I do not see "constrained in how nature wants to behave" as a bad thing if one wants something to sound "natural" ... If one wants to create "unnatural" sounds from electronic signals, this is EASY! .. The real challenge is, and always will be, to create the same "constraints" for electronic signals as nature does - And this can be incredibly difficult and complex, because these "constraints" are incredibly complex..
Sure, its a pain having to use a bucket rather than a small circuit board - but, right now, IMO, there is no circuit which produces the sound you have produced.. Or certainly nothing simple or low cost.
Fred.
ps.. With analogue electronic formant filters, one needs a 'drive' signal containing the required harmonics, and subtractive synthesis is the primary mode of operation - one is also limited by practical matters such as complexity and cost.. a few formants (perhaps 4 for a fixed formant filter down to 2 for a variable formant filter) is all that can be easily implemented. With digital FF's the iput signal can be dynamically modified to apply / create harmonics and formants..
But I suspect that the signal into the bucket was not particularly rich harmonically - that the resonant properties of the bucket allows formant frequencies to be created even when these are not present in the input signal.. I suspect that if you tap the bucket with a soft mallet, these frequencies will appear..
And I suspect that this allows a harmonically 'soft' signal to be mixed with the bucket resonances, giving that smooth sound and producing the extremely complex and frequency dependent waveform we see on the sample.. The closest I have seen to this is when audio is used to modulate the VFO in a theremin via acoustic coupling.
pps..
I have listened to the other samples in this thread , but alas, IMO, they do not have the vocal qualities of the sample Cello Sound.. those samples sound much more like what I would expect from a theremin played (without any other processing) into a rubber bucket! .. There are some occurences of harmonics at formant frequencies, but the waveform is far less complex, and does not change as dynamically with frequency as the astounding sample presented in this thread does. Also, whilst there are occasional frequencies / harmonics which sound and can be seen to be 'formant like', the quantity and distribution of these does not come close to the sample presented in this thread.
Was a TM or other processor used in the setup that produced the sample presented in this thread? If it was, this is still useful - it sounds much better IMO than raw TM.