by sampleandhold » Wed Mar 31, 2004 5:13 am
yes, what kalseed said.
try lpfing a square, triangle or saw wave. that should get something that you can use. even at a really low cut you should still have roll off that will give the lowend frequencies some clearity.
i always thought the lowest cut off in the lpf was 69... perhaps i am wrong.
you really don't want to use q on a sine wave. hell even filtering it with a lpf doesn't have much effected on the sound. all you are doing when filtering a sine wave is removing noise and reducing the amount of notes that you can play. what i mean is, if you set your lpf at 110 hz, once you hit A2 you will start to hear the roll off of the filter and by A3 or 4 (depending on the poles of the lpf) you will have almost no signal at all. adding q just makes the note or notes around the center freqency louder. q just accents the frequencies around the cutoff. so with a sine wave that has no harmonics all you are really doing is making the note or few notes prior to the cut off sound really loud compared to what is the rest are doing. if you were to look at this as a graphical rep. it would look kind of like half a bell curve... sort of flat until you get near the cut off, a raise then a fall at the cut off down to infinite.
one other suggestion is, take your bline and program the velocities as you need. so if one note is really quite, because of hearing sensitivities or monitor issues, make that the loudest note then scale the rest to that note. so if another note sounds louder, tweak the velocity of that note so that it appears level to the note that you need louder.
you may want to look up the fletcher munson curve on line. that will show you that certian frequencies appear to be louder or quiter even though they are have the same energy. As humans, we don't have consistant hearing.
one other thing, perhaps try using the 2 or 4 pole lpf's. that is about all i have for ideas.
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