fmrhode — Uses FM synthesis to create a Fender Rhodes electric piano sound.
Uses FM synthesis to create a Fender Rhodes electric piano sound. It comes from a family of FM sounds, all using 4 basic oscillators and various architectures, as used in the TX81Z synthesizer.
All these opcodes take 5 tables for initialization. The first 4 are the basic inputs and the last is the low frequency oscillator (LFO) used for vibrato. The last table should usually be a sine wave.
The initial waves should be:
ifn1 -- sine wave
ifn2 -- sine wave
ifn3 -- sine wave
ifn4 -- fwavblnk.aiff
Note | |
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The file “fwavblnk.aiff” is also available at ftp://ftp.cs.bath.ac.uk/pub/dream/documentation/sounds/modelling/ |
kamp -- Amplitude of note.
kfreq -- Frequency of note played.
kc1, kc2 -- Controls for the synthesizer:
kc1 -- Mod index 1
kc2 -- Crossfade of two outputs
Algorithm -- 5
kvdepth -- Vibrator depth
kvrate -- Vibrator rate
Here is an example of the fmrhode opcode. Play fmrhode.csd, and fwavblnk.aiff
Example 357. Example of the fmrhode opcode.
See the sections Real-time Audio and Command Line Flags for more information on using command line flags.
<CsoundSynthesizer> <CsOptions> ; Select audio/midi flags here according to platform -odac ;;;realtime audio out ;-iadc ;;;uncomment -iadc if realtime audio input is needed too ; For Non-realtime ouput leave only the line below: ; -o fmrhode.wav -W ;;; for file output any platform </CsOptions> <CsInstruments> sr = 44100 ksmps = 32 nchnls = 2 0dbfs = 1 instr 1 kfreq = 220 kc1 = p4 kc2 = p5 kvdepth = 0.01 kvrate = 3 ifn1 = 1 ifn2 = 1 ifn3 = 1 ifn4 = 2 ivfn = 1 asig fmrhode .5, kfreq, kc1, kc2, kvdepth, kvrate, ifn1, ifn2, ifn3, ifn4, ivfn outs asig, asig endin </CsInstruments> <CsScore> ; sine wave. f 1 0 32768 10 1 ; audio file. f 2 0 256 1 "fwavblnk.aiff" 0 0 0 i 1 0 3 6 0 i 1 + . 6 3 i 1 + . 20 0 e </CsScore> </CsoundSynthesizer>