T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2048.1 | does DEp50 have vocode? | ANT::JANZEN | cf. ANT::CIRCUITS,ANT::UWAVES | Mon Jul 17 1989 11:12 | 9 |
| I built a PAiA vocoder for $100 and sold it to someone here.
It is still $100. It worked. When I vocoded a pulse tone witha
pro FM announcer, you could understand 9 out of ten words (no through
signal).
I think it has 4 filters per octave over two octaves.
Laurie Anderson used to use it. I don't know if she will at BAM
next season.
It was cute but I was going a different direction.
Tom
|
2048.2 | Mr. Roboto in Retirement | AQUA::ROST | It's the beat, the beat, the beat | Mon Jul 17 1989 11:57 | 5 |
|
Korg and Roland used to have one or two vocoders, which were actually
analog synths with vocoders on board. They were expensive at the time
($1000 + ??) but we're talking pre-MIDI gear, here.....on the other
hand I never see any going used, maybe they're all holed up in studios?
|
2048.3 | Vocoder Schematic Available | MRSVAX::MISKINIS | | Mon Jul 17 1989 12:03 | 12 |
| Hello,
I built a VOCODER from the schematic given in the MAY 1985 issuse
of KEYBOARD. It is the same design as the PAIA vocoder, which they
sold in kit form.
I still have the schematic, if anyone's interested. It is an
8-band vocoder, optimized for VOICE INPUT. Changing some resistors
(in the filter circuits) allows optimization for INSTRUMENT input.
_John_
|
2048.4 | I still want one. | LEDDEV::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Mon Jul 17 1989 12:20 | 27 |
|
hmmmmmmmm, I thought that was in Elec. Musician....
PAIA stuff never impressed me. You get what you pay for...
Are you SURE that's the same design? 8 banks is minimum.
Everyone know what were talkin about?
Control input (voice)-->[ bank of 'format' filters]
| | | ..... |
| | | ..... | (control voltages)
| | | ..... |
Sound input ----------->[bank of voltage controled filters]----->OUTPUT
The spectrum of the 'sound' input aproximates the spectrum
of the control input. The 'sound' input takes on the tone
qualities of the control, which is usually a voice.
Great sound. But just a craze? It DID have a distinctive
quality that could get old.
Could the new signal processors handle an FFT and subsequent
'spectral modification' of the sound digitally and hopefully
create a better approximation of the input spectrum (ie, the
equivalent of lotsa bands controlling lotsa filters)
sound
|
2048.5 | MIT COmputer Music Journal strikes again | ANT::JANZEN | cf. ANT::CIRCUITS,ANT::UWAVES | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:09 | 9 |
| I am pretty certain that a modern FX box has a vocoder function.
I thot it was dep50.
It's hard to adjust and mix. On a Fame episode, carol burnett's daughter
used one and you could just barely hear it. The engineer has to
know that it's a special effect to mix in properly.
There is an article about digital vocoding in a computer music journal
last year.
Tom
|
2048.6 | can/t remember who | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:30 | 5 |
|
There's a cmpany in the U.K. that specializes in them -- a whole
range of rackmount boxes. Anyone know the name?
Richard.
|
2048.7 | Roland DVP-1 | GUESS::YERAZUNIS | Gordian Knot Lock Co. | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:55 | 16 |
| Roland also made a box called the DVP-1 [Digital Voice Processor].
It was vocoder-like, except that it only had one audio and one MIDI
input. You plugged a mike into the input and talked at it. Meanwhile
you played on a MIDI controller board. An internal synth in the
DVP then generated the "carrier" sound and modulated it with the
outputs of the formant filter bank.
It was quite understandable- but it "lost" because of the silly
internal synth (eight patches, no programmability). I would have
much preferred a vocoder that allows a user to jack in his own carrier
sound or use an internally generated carrier.
However, I've got hopes for a vocoder someday.
-Bill
|
2048.8 | Roland SVC-350 | EEMELI::LEHTINEN | He's here! The Phantom of The Opera... | Tue Jul 18 1989 13:10 | 12 |
|
I have Roland SVC-350, which was one of the rack mount devices
from The Roland Rack series. It's a 10 filter design and has no
sound source of it's own so you have to supply both carrier and
modulation. It also has sliders to adjust the level relationship
between the banks. It sounds quite rich. Phil Collins used it on
"In The Air Tonight". I recommend it. I believe they go pretty
cheap these days if you just manage find one.
Timo
|
2048.9 | wowiiieeeuuuooow | HSKAPL::VERGHESE | Noddy goes to Sweden | Wed Jul 19 1989 04:12 | 28 |
| .6> There's a company in the U.K. that specializes in them -- a whole
.6> range of rackmount boxes. Anyone know the name?
I suppose you're thinking of EMS.
To my knowledge, EMS produce two vocoder models, the 2000 and 3000.
Both are 16-channel, the latter having individual attenuators
for each channel. There's also a 22-channel model (5000), but this,
I believe, is only available to special order.
It seems that vocoders are mainly used for non-musical applications
these days.
According to an article in Music Technology Magazine, vocoders were
used extensively in the Falklands war, for scrambling secret
communications. (And I thought vocoders were innocent little boxes
from the prehistoric (=analog) days.)
Anyhow, EMS can be contacted at:
Trendeal Vean Barn,
Ladock,
Truro TR2 4NW,
England.
Tel. 0726-883265
JVE
|
2048.10 | | ANT::JANZEN | cf. ANT::CIRCUITS,ANT::UWAVES | Wed Jul 19 1989 09:50 | 2 |
| Vocoders are from Bell Labs, pre-1940.
Tom
|
2048.11 | | GUESS::YERAZUNIS | People explode all the time. Natural causes. | Fri Jul 21 1989 11:57 | 9 |
|
And (supposedly) vocoders/voice scrambler technology was the particular
piece of still-secret information that brought Alan Turing to the
attention of the Crown in his post-war trial for "gross indecency
between adults".
What a wonderful history for the technology!
-Bill
|
2048.12 | Off of `A Momentary Lapse of Reason' | GIAMEM::I_SHAW | I hate LJ252-Amiga problems. | Mon Jul 24 1989 10:25 | 13 |
| > < Note 2048.3 by MRSVAX::MISKINIS >
> -< Vocoder Schematic Available >-
> I still have the schematic, if anyone's interested. It is an
Are you still around? I sent mail twice but you didn't answer. I'd
really like to build one.
Also, does anyone know what kind of job Pink Floyd used on
`A New Machine' part 1 and 2? It sounds almost like the source input sound
was a Hammond organ.
--mikie--
|
2048.13 | O.K. o.k., so it's his real voice? | STORMY::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Wed Jul 26 1989 15:03 | 8 |
|
>>Also, does anyone know what kind of job Pink Floyd used on
>>`A New Machine' part 1 and 2? It sounds almost like the source input sound
While were asking....does anyone know what kind of setup Midnight
Star uses?
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
2048.14 | | TALK::HARRIMAN | Talk? Talk? It's only talk! | Mon Aug 28 1989 14:45 | 27 |
|
I was the anonymous person who bought Tom's PAIA.
It works. Good toy for $100. I used it recently to do a performance
art work where I took Bob Tilton's (a Dallas religious dial-a-prayer
charismatic) voice and overlaid it on a Hammond organ sound. It works
much better with limiters on both inputs and both outputs. Certainly
could be built for less than $100 but it's not worth the effort.
The filters are called "formant" filters, not "format". Formants are
the result of many high-resonance filtering operations simultaneously
on a high-harmonic-content source. Formants sound like this:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyy
oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh (imagine a monophonic tone)
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
uuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
I built a formant generator from Bell Labs when I was a kid, it came
with a nifty record of what ended up being HAL's voice from 2001, it
sang "Day-zee, Day-zee, gib mee yoor ann ser doooooo" among other
things they were doing in the 1960's with Hollerith cards and large
banks of formant generators. The PAIA is a bit noisy, but what do
you want for 100 bux.
/pjh
|
2048.15 | VOCODER SCHEMATIC's NEEDED | TDCIS3::RENOUVEL | | Wed Mar 14 1990 05:13 | 12 |
| Can somebody send me a vocoder schematic in france by INTERNAL MAIL.
Thanks a lot.
PAT.
DIGITAL EQUIPMENT FRANCE
11 avenue Joliot Curie
Renouvel Patrick
91000 EVRY CEDEX
|
2048.16 | Help anywhere? | GRANPA::RUYOUNG | | Thu Jul 12 1990 12:55 | 7 |
| If I got the plans for the PAiA vocoder (8 band), could someone
help me with modifiying the design to be 16 band? I mean, the formant
filters are all configured for certain bands. Is there a nice formula
to compute the band, so I could expand the number of filters? Ya know,
so it will sound better?
Mike
|
2048.17 | It's not that bad to start with | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 2285421FXO/28 MicrowaveLogicQual | Thu Jul 12 1990 13:15 | 12 |
| You would have to calculate the values of the tanks for inbetween
center frequencies and also new component values for halving the
bandwidth of each filter. it might ring a lot.
The components would probably have to be smaller tolerance and more
expensive as a result.
Have you ever heard the PAiA vocoder? It isn't bad. When I had one,
I could vocode a professional FM announcer into a pulse tone with no
through signal and understand 9 out of 10 words.
The main requirement for that vocoder, in my opinion, is limiter
compressors on the instrument and voice input to prevent peaking and
distortion, and higher gain on the mic input.
Tom
|
2048.18 | VOCODER CIRCUITS DRAWING | EVOAI2::RENOUVEL | | Fri Dec 13 1991 05:46 | 29 |
| Hello doctors,
One of you sent me SCHEMATICS of the Vocoder PAIA last year,
but I had many problems of many sort , and could not begin
the VOCODER. I gave to my cousin the SCHEMATICS,and he tell
me that he need the "DRAWINGS" I don't know if this term is correct
???
to build the Circuits ?.!*#\'
Could somebody of you send me this Circuit Drawing ?
My Internal Adress is:
Digital Equipment France
Bois Briard
Service IS 5113
Attn PATRICK RENOUVEL
91000 EVRY
THANKS A LOT FOR YOUR PRECIOUS HELP...
Pat
|