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| United States Patent | 4884486 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4884486.html |
| Inventor(s) | McClish; Richard E. D. (1739 Addison suite 15, Berkeley, CA 94703) |
| Abstract | The tone signal from a transducer monitoring the music vibrations of a
bowed musical instrument contains an objectionable friction noise
component which is removed by passing the tone signal through a high-pass
filter having a variable cutoff frequency which is controlled by a pitch
detector monitoring the fundamental frequency of a played note in the tone
signal. The cutoff frequency of the filter is kept slightly below the
fundamental frequency of the played note to avoid altering the tone color
of the tone signal. When no fundamental frequency is detected by the pitch
detector, the cutoff frequency of the filter remains at a pre-determined
minimum which may be adjustable by the musician for best effect when
strings are both bowed and plucked. The filtered tone signal may be
applied to the pitch detector in order to increase the accuracy of the
pitch detection process and thus increase the accuracy of the noise
reducing characteristics of the system. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4884486 |
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Electronic scratch filter for bowed instruments |
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| Publication Date |
December 5, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
April 27, 1989 |
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| Parent Case |
This application is a continuation of application serial No. 198,780 filed
May 25, 1988 and now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to bowed musical instruments and more
specifically to the electronic reduction of friction noise in the signal
from transducers used in connection therewith.
BACKGROUND ART
Transducers are commonly used in connection with bowed musical instruments
in order to allow these instruments to be amplified, recorded or to allow
them to control other instruments such as music synthesizers. When a bowed
instrument is played by drawing the bow across a string, a friction noise
is generated in the string at the point of contact between the string and
the bow. This friction noise is transmitted through the string into the
bridge of the instrument. In conventional acoustic instruments, this bow
noise does not have much projection power and becomes less objectionable
as the distance between the instrument and the listener is increased. The
musician playing the conventional acoustic instrument may ignore this bow
noise in the confidence that the listener does not perceive it to an
objectionable degree.
A first problem exists when an electric instrument is being played and
reproduced by an amplifier, that the player and the listener hear
approximately the same sound. The listener is then subjected to a
significantly greater amount of bow noise than he is normally subjected to
when listening to an acoustic instrument. The disproportion in the bow
noise level gives the sound of the instrument a "scratchy" character which
is objectionable. This condition is worsened when the instrument has a
bridge pickup. Since the bow noise enters the instrument through the
bridge, there will consequently be a higher degree of bow noise with this
type of pickup which otherwise transduces the desirable music vibrations
in a very satisfactory manner.
A second problem exists when the pickup signal of an electric bowed
instrument is analyzed to produce a fundamental frequency related signal,
that the bow noise present in the pickup signal may interfere with the
analysis and result in erroneous signals and correspondingly erroneous
control commands. This is particularly objectionable when controlling a
second instrument such as a music synthesizer.
A third problem exists when the direction of bowing is changed while
playing an electric bowed instrument, that a thumping sound is generated
as a result of the bow noise suddenly stopping and then starting again.
A fourth problem exists, when using frequency shifting devices such as
transposers or frequency dividers of the gated-signal type for producing
sub-octave tone signals, that the bow noise gets correspondingly lowered
in frequency in each corresponding sub-octave voice thus generated, making
the resulting complex tones sound rather artificial.
It is accordingly a broad object of the present invention to provide a tone
signal filter which selectively removes the undesirable portion of
friction noise present in the signal from a transducer monitoring the
desirable string vibrations of a bowed musical instrument.
It is a more specific object of the present invention to effect this
selective noise reduction without significantly altering the tonal balance
of the tone signal from the transducer.
It is another object of the present invention to selectively remove the
noises in the transducer signal resulting from changes in the direction of
bowing of the instrument.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a filter which
passes the signal transients resulting from plucking the strings, in an
independent manner and possibly in an independently adjustable manner.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a bow
noise filter which may be used in conjunction with frequency shifting
devices to produce realistic sub-octave voices having the tonal
characteristics of the bowed instruments producing the corresponding
frequency range.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the invention, a transducer monitors the displacements of a
bowed vibrating element such as a violin string under tension. Bow noise
is present in the transducer signal when the bow is dragged across the
vibrating element. When a note is bowed, the bow noise is mixed with the
desirable music vibrations of the vibrating element. The portion of the
bow noise which is not masked by the desirable music vibrations of the
vibrating element tends to give the sound of the instrument a "scratchy"
character and is preferably selectively reduced sufficiently for the
masking effect to take place.
In order to selectively reduce and possibly remove the objectionable
portion of the bow noise, the transducer signal is applied to a high-pass
filter having a variable cutoff frequency which is controlled by a
real-time fundamental frequency detector. The fundamental frequency
detector produces a signal, the magnitude of which is a function of the
fundamental frequency of the played note. The cutoff frequency of a filter
usually means the -3 db point in the filter's frequency response. The
signal attenuating characteristics of high-pass filter is well known in
the prior art. The cutoff frequency of the filter is made to track the
fundamental frequency of the played note. The cutoff frequency of the
filter is preferably kept at or slightly below the fundamental frequency
of the played note, to avoid attenuating the desirable music components of
the transducer signal to a significant degree, which would alter the tonal
balance of the filtered transducer signal.
When no note is being played, the cutoff frequency of the filter remains at
a fixed point which is referred to herein as the "idle" frequency of the
filter. This idle frequency may be adjustable by the musicican who can set
the filter response to his or her taste. The idle frequency of the filter
is preferably set at or above the lowest played note to be passed by the
filter. The point at which the idle frequency of the filter is set has a
unique effect on the filter's dynamic response. It is thus possible to
adjust the response of the filter to the signal transients caused by the
plucking of a string, independently of the filter's response to the bowed
signal. This is possible because there is no fundamental frequency to be
detected in the string vibrations when the plucking finger damps the
vibrations in the string immediately before releasing it to start a
plucked note. The adjustable idle frequency of the scratch filter enables
the musician to set the frequency response for best effect during bowed
passages while being capable of independently adjusting the intensity of
the plucking attacks. This feature may also be used by the musician to
achieve novel tonal effects.
The beginning of a bowed note is a much more gradual event than the attack
of a plucked note. The filter has thus more time to reach a stable
tracking state at the beginning of a bowed note. The filter preferably has
a short settling time in order to track rapid intervals in a fairly
accurate manner. The magnitude of the reaction time of the filter is
determined by the ability of the ear to discern a change in the tonal
balance of the tone signal. If the filter has a steep attenuation slope
below the cutoff frequency, it should react more slowly than a filter
having a lesser slope. Since the lower notes mask the bow noise to a
greater degree than the high notes, it has been found preferable that the
settling time of the filter be asymetrical, having a cutoff frequency
which can be lowered at a faster rate than it can be raised. In this
manner, when wide intervals are being played at a rapid rate, in such
instances as performing trills, the filter simply settles slightly below
the lowest note and ignores the higher one. The filter gradually takes the
higher note into account as the rate of the trill is lowered so that the
cutoff frequency of the filter remains below the fundamental frequency of
the played note. This feature of the present invention reduces the
distortion in the filtered signal. The filter preferably has no control
signal feedthrough a d.c. offsets in the audio signal path which could
result in the creation of undesirable transients in the filtered signal
when the filter frequency changes at a rapid rate.
It is possible to apply the filtered transducer signal to the fundamental
frequency detector in order to achieve a higher degree of performance. By
doing so, the reaction time of the fundamental frequency detector is
shortened and made more stable over time, especially in the high playing
positions of each string where the level of the bow noise is high
comparatively to that of the desirable vibrations of the played note.
Since the frequency components of the bow noise are approximately constant
in a given string, virtually irrespectively of the fingered note, it is
possible to limit the cutoff frequency of the filter to a maximum value
where the attenuation of the noise is sufficient for the taste of the
musician. This reduces the speed requirements of the filter in the higher
played positions, thus reducing signal distortion in those instances and
possibly making the filter more economical to manufacture.
In a first embodiment, the tone signal from a string transducer is applied
to a fundamental frequency detector which produces a control voltage
proportional to the frequency of the played note. The transducer signal is
also applied to a voltage-controlled high-pass filter, the cutoff
frequency of which is governed by the control voltage from the fundamental
frequency detector. A minimum frequency voltage is applied to the filter
to limit the minimum cutoff frequency of the filter to a frequency
slightly below the frequency of the lowest played note. The bow noise
level is selectively reduced in the filtered transducer signal.
In a second embodiment, a signal detector controls a bypass circuit which
applies a user adjustable control voltage to the filter in the absence of
a played note, so that the filter's response to string plucking transients
may be set to the muisician's taste. The filtered transducer signal is
applied to the audio input of the fundamental frequency detector to
increase the speed and accuracy of the detector. The filtered transducer
signal is also applied to an audio signal gate, the conductivity of which
is determined by the output state of a frequency divider clocked by the
period output of the fundamental frequency detector controlling the filter
frequency. A sub-octave tone signal of realistic instrumental character is
thus produced in addition to the noise-free transducer tone signal.
In a third embodiment, the respective cutoff frequencies of a plurality of
filters according to the present invention are individually determined by
synthesizer control commands produced by a synthesizer controller
interface responsive to the electrical signals from a plurality of string
transducers located in the bridge of a bowed instrument.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The above and still further objects, features and advantages of the present
invention will become apparent upon consideration of the following
detailed description of specific embodiments thereof, especially when
taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing wherein:
FIG.1 is a block diagram of a first embodiment of the present invention
producing a filtered transducer signal.
FIG.2 is a block diagram of a second embodiment of the present invention
producing a sub-octave voice in addition to producing a filtered
transducer signal.
FIG.3 is a block diagram of a third embodiment of the present invention
used in conjunction with a synthesizer controller interface.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to FIG.1 of the drawings, a transducer 11 is monitoring the
displacements of a bowed vibrating element such as a string under tension.
The transducer 11 may either contact a portion of the instrument or
preferably directly contact the vibrating element. The transducer 11 is
preferably maximally sensitive in a plane approximately parallel to the
plane of bowing and minimally sensitive in a plane perpendicular to the
plane of bowing. The plane of bowing refers to a plane determined by and
parallel to the direction in which the bow is dragged across the vibrating
element to produce a musical tone.
The transducer 11 produces a signal A in response to the monitored
displacements of the vibrating element. When the bow is dragged across the
vibrating element to produce a musical tone, friction noise is generated
in the vibrating element along with the desirable music vibrations. In
addition to containing components corresponding to the monitored music
vibrations of the vibrating element, the transducer signal A will contain
components corresponding to the bow noise, the amplitude of which is a
function of the loudness of the music vibrations of the played note. These
noise components in the transducer signal A may become objectionable when
the played note fails to mask them. In a stringed instrument, the
frequency characteristics of the bow noise generated in a given string are
quite independent of the vibrating length of the string.
The transducer signal A is passed through a high-pass filter 15 having a
controllable cutoff frequency in order to selectively reduce and possibly
eliminate the objectionable bow noise components of the signal A without
significantly altering the tonal balance of the desirable music
vibrations. For this purpose, the cutoff frequency of the filter 15 is
maintained at a frequency slightly below the fundamental frequency of the
played note. The filter cutoff frequency is controlled by a fundamental
frequency detector 12 which produces a control signal E, the magnitude of
which varies as a function of the fundamental frequency of the played
note.
If the transducer 11 contacts a single vibrating element, it is preferably
that the fundamental frequency detector 12 respond to the loudest player
note in the transducer signal A. If a plurality of played notes are
present in the transducer signal A, the fundamental frequency detector 12
should also preferably respond to the loudest played note. If a plurality
of loud played notes are present in the transducer signal A, the
fundamental frequency detector 12 should respond to the lowest played
note. The fundamental frequency detector 12 should at lest respond to a
played note which masks the bow noise to a significant degree.
It is desirable to effect the desired noise reduction without introducing
or creating spurious frequencies in the filtered transducer signal D. For
this purpose, voltage M imposes a lower limit for the cutoff frequency of
the filter 15. This lower limit is preferably set at a frequency slightly
below the lowest player note. In a stringed instrument such as a violin,
the preferred lower limit is slightly below the fundamental frequency of
the open string. This lower limit serves to prevent excessive drops in the
cutoff frequency upon a change in the direction of bowing or in the
absence of a played note.
An interesting advantage exists in having an adjustable lower limit for the
cutoff frequency of the filter 15, in that the response of the filter to
the attack transients caused by plucking the string can be made
independently adjustable while the bowed notes are filtered in a normal
manner. This allows the musician to possibly optimize the frequency
response of a reproduction or recording system for best effect with bowed
notes and independently set the low frequency response of the plucking
attacks for best overall effect. Voltage M can therefore be an adjustable
voltage.
Although it is not preferably from the standpoint of performance, it may be
preferably from the standpoint of economy of manufacture to vary the
cutoff frequency of the filter 15 in stepped increments but their size
should be kept sufficiently small to avoid introducing or creating
spurious frequencies in the filtered transducer signal D.
The cutoff frequency of the filter 15 is preferably lowered at a faster
rate than it is raised in order for it to remain below the lowest played
note when large intervals are played at a fast rate in such instances as
playing trills. The cutoff frequency should settle slightly below the
lowest note of the trill in order to remain below the lowest played note,
preferably at all times. In this manner, the tonal balance of the signal
is not audibly affected by the filter while the objectionable portion of
the bow noise is significantly reduced.
FIG.2 shows a second embodiment of the present invention in which the
transducer signal A is passed through the noise-removing high-pass filter
15 before it is applied to the fundamental frequency detector 12 which
comprises a fundamental frequency comparator 13 and a frequency to voltage
converter 14. By applying the filtered transducer signal D to the
fundamental frequency detector 12, the accuracy of the detection is
increased since the filter 15 significantly reduces the amplitude of
low-frequency transients resulting from plucking attacks and changes in
the direction of bowing, which tend to cause erratic operation of the
detector 12 and thus prevent signal E from being truly indicative of the
fundamental frequency of the played note. The fundamental frequency
comparator 13 produces a period output signal C which is a square wave at
the fundamental frequency of the played note. The filtered transducer
signal D is passed through an audio signal gate 20, the conductivity of
which is controlled by signal K from the frequency divider 18. Signal K is
a square wave one octave below the frequency of signal C. The audio signal
gate 20 thus produces a sub-octave tone signal L the fundamental frequency
of which is an octave below that of the played note in the transducer
signal A. Since it is a portion of the filtered transducer signal D,
signal L is also a bow noise -free signal.
Signal detector 16 produces a signal B indicative of the presence of a
played note in the transducer signal A. Signal B is applied to a bypass
switch 17. When a player note is detected by the signal detector 16, the
bypass switch 17 allows control signal E from the fundamental frequency
detector 12 to control the cutoff frequency of the filter 15. In the
absence of a played note in the transducer signal A, as detected by the
signal detector 16, the bypass switch 17 allows signal H from the idle
frequency selector 19 to control the cutoff frequency of the filter 15.
The magnitude of signal H is adjustable by the musician.
FIG.3 illustrates a third embodiment of the present invention in which the
discrete tone signals from a plurality of string contacting transducers
31, 32, 33 and 34 located in the bridge of a bowed instrument are
respectively applied to a corresponding number of digitally-controlled
high-pass filters 36, 37, 38 and 39 which are part of a logic-controlled
filter bank 35. The separate filtered transducer signals are applied to an
instrument controller interface 41 which produces note commands to control
a second instrument such as a music synthesizer in response to the played
notes in the signals from the transducers 31-34 of the bowed instrument.
The note command signal N from the instrument controller 41 is applied to
a converter 40 which produces separate filter control signals in response
to the note numbers and "bend" commands of signal N. Since the instrument
controller 41 may have transposition capabilities, a correction signal P
is applied to the converter 40 to compensate for such transposition
related offsets and keep the respective cutoff frequencies of the filters
36-39 preferably slightly below the corresponding fundamental frequencies
of the played notes in the separate signals from the transducers 31-34.
Since the filtered signals are applied to the instrument controller 41, the
frequency detection occurring therein will be more accurate and stable
than if the transducer signals were applied directly to the instrument
controller 41. The logic-controlled filter bank 35 or a part thereof may
be a part of the instrument controller 41 in which the filtered transducer
signals may be used for improving the fundamental frequency detection
performance of the instrument controller 41. The logic-controlled filter
bank 35 or a part thereof may exist in the form of logic instructions used
to increase the frequency detection performance of the instrument
controller 41. The filter control signals may also be applied to other
digitally-controlled functions to create novel effects.
Still other variations of the present invention will suggest themselves to
persons of ordinary skill in the art. It is intended therefore that the
foregoing description be considered as exemplary only and that the scope
of the invention be ascertained by the following claims.
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Description  |
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