1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to synthesizing an expressive portamento transition between musical tones and controlling this portamento transition by modifying the effect of a pitch wheel control signal. In particular, the present invention pertains to synthesizers capable of responding to a typical pitch wheel control by generating slide-step-slide and slide-step portamento pitch curves
2. Background Art
An important part of the expressive control exercised by a wind or string player involves controlling precisely how pitch changes from note to note and, in particular, how pitch changes during the transition from one note to the next. For example, when a violinist plays two notes of different pitches in succession he may choose to change the pitch in an abrupt manner or he may slide from the first pitch to the second by sliding his finger along the fingerboard in a continuous manner. This is called portamento. If the violinist slides from note to note-on the same string without changing the bow then the portamento pitch curve is very smooth with no discernable discontinuity in pitch from the first pitch to the second as shown in
However, the violinist may also change bow direction at some point during the slide, the violinist may change the finger that depresses the string during the slide, or the violinist may change which string is bowed during the slide. In these later cases there is typically a more complex pitch curve.
Another portamento variant is shown in the complex pitch curve of
A typical electronic musical synthesizer such as a MIDI keyboard instrument includes a piano or organ-like keyboard and a pitch wheel control. The pitch wheel control has a center detent position. Using one hand a performer can displace the pitch wheel control in a continuous manner above or below the center detent position. If the performer releases the pitch wheel it automatically returns to the center detent position.
When a note is struck on the keyboard a musical tone begins. In the typical musical synthesizer, at any instant the exact pitch of the musical tone is related to the sum of the pitch indicated by the struck key on the keyboard—C, D, F# etc—and the position of the pitch wheel. The pitch wheel enables the performer to “bend” the pitch in a quasi-continuous manner above or below the pitch indicated by the struck key.
A typical music synthesizer may also include a separate portamento control. When two notes of different pitches are played on the keyboard in succession, the portamento control determines the shape of the pitch change. With portamento set to zero, when the second note is played the pitch changes abruptly to the pitch of the second note. With non-zero portamento values, when the second note is played the pitch begins a gradual slide from the first note pitch to the second note pitch. The exact non-zero portamento value determines the rate of change of the pitch during this slide.
Suppose the performer wants to generate a slide-step-slide portamento transition as described above using the standard pitch wheel. Further, suppose that the performer is playing in a reasonably legato fashion so that the first note-off occurs either after the second note, at the second note-on, or very shortly before the second note-on. If the first note-off is at or after the second note-on then the sound continues without interruption between the first and second notes. If the note-off occurs slightly before the second note-on we assume that the note takes a finite amount of time to die away—e.g. 0.05 seconds—so that again the sound is substantially continuous from the first to the second note.
The performer can effectively perform the initial pitch-slide that occurs at the end of the first note. However if the performer continues to hold the pitch wheel after the second note is struck the pitch jumps to the keyboard pitch plus the current value of the pitch wheel. If the performer quickly releases the pitch wheel after striking the second note an undesirable quick slide back to the target pitch occurs. This is shown in
Alternatively, if the performer releases the pitch wheel just prior to striking the second note there is an equally undesirable bend back to the first pitch before jumping abruptly to the second pitch. This is shown in
The portamento-control also does not support the generation of slide-step-slide pitch curves. The pitch shapes are deficient in two ways: first, the pitch slide does not begin until the second note is played on the keyboard; second, the pitch slides continuously from the first note pitch to the second note pitch—there is no step. This is shown in
Both MIDI portamento control and standard MIDI pitch wheel curves have shortcomings. A need remains in the art for apparatus and methods for generating portamento transitions in synthesized music which better model portamento transitions in musical performances.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide for apparatus and methods for generating portamento transitions in synthesized music, which better model portamento transitions in musical performances. This is accomplished by providing a musical synthesizer that can respond to a typical pitch wheel control by generating slide-step-slide and slide-step portamento pitch curves such as those shown in
The musical synthesizer according to the present invention responds to a pitch wheel control in a context sensitive manner.
In a first embodiment of the present invention, when a first note-on occurs the pitch wheel behaves in the standard fashion. However, when a second-note on occurs, if the pitch wheel is still being held after the second note-on then the effects of the pitch wheel are disabled. This is illustrated in
In a second embodiment of the present invention the effects of the pitch wheel are delayed slightly relative to the original raw pitch wheel. The result is that if the pitch wheel is released slightly before a second note-on occurs then the delayed pitch wheel signal will still be at substantially the previous held value when the second note-on occurs. This is shown in
As an alternative, the pitch delay device can hold the pitch wheel signal at a peak value until the pitch wheel has returned to near-zero.
In a third embodiment of the present invention when a second-note on occurs, if the pitch wheel is still being held after the second note-on, effects of the pitch wheel are disabled and, in addition, the pitch curve is forced to make a small ramp beginning towards the pitch of the second note-on. This is illustrated in
In a fourth embodiment of the present invention, the pitch bend behaves as in the third embodiment described above when the pitch wheel direction is positive, but behaves as in the first embodiment described above when the pitch wheel direction is negative.
In a fifth embodiment of the present invention the effects of the first and second embodiments are combined. So that clean slide-step portamento curves are generated whether the pitch wheel is released before or after the second note-on.
In a sixth embodiment of the present invention the effects of the first and third embodiments are combined. So that clean slide-step portamento curves occur when the pitch wheel is released before the second note-on and slide-step-slide portamento curves occur when the pitch wheel is released after the second note-on.
In a seventh embodiment of the present invention the effects of the first and fourth embodiments are combined. So that clean slide-step portamento curves occur when the pitch wheel is released before the second note-on or when the pitch wheel direction is negative, and slide-step-slide portamento curves occur when the pitch wheel is released after the second note-on and the pitch wheel direction is positive.
Below is a detailed description of a musical synthesizer according to the present invention corresponding to the seventh embodiment described above in the Summary of the Invention. It will be obvious to one skilled in the art of synthesizer design that this embodiment can be adapted to correspond to any of the embodiments one through six discussed in the Brief Summary of the Invention.
a1=−2*cos(R) a2=R2
where R=0.6 is the radius of the poles on the unit circle. The type and structure of this filter is not critical to the present invention as long as it generates approximately the delay required. The pitch_wheel_filtered signal 108 goes to the pitch wheel state machine 102 and the voice block 103 (
If while in pitchBendUsed 121 a new note_on message is received and the current direction of the pitch_wheel is negative and the new note_on is a negative pitch interval relative to the current active voice pitch, then state pitchWheelIgnore 122 is entered. In 122 the pitch wheel filter 101 forces the pitch_wheel_filtered signal to zero effectively disabling the pitch wheel. This causes the desired slide-step pitch curve as shown in
If while in pitchBendUsed 121 a new note_on message is received and the current direction of the pitch_wheel is positive and the new note_on is a positive pitch interval relative to the current active voice pitch, then state pitchWheelIgnore 123 is entered. In 123 the pitch wheel filter 101 driven slightly negative—e.g. one half step—and then is forced to ramp over approximately ⅓ second up to zero. This causes the desired slide-step-slide pitch curve as shown in
Those skilled in the art of sound synthesis will appreciate that the embodiments described herein are only examples illustrating the invention. The invention comprises apparatus and methods for responding to a pitch wheel control signal by generating synthesized portamento transitions that more nearly resemble portamento transitions from performed music.
The term “pitch wheel” is intended to indicate the source of a control signal (such as a MIDI signal) affecting pitch, and does not require that a conventional spring-loaded synthesizer pitch wheel be used to generate the signal. Any equivalent control device may generate the pitch wheel signal, including other physical interfaces such as sliders or switches, or computer generated control signals.
The present invention my be used with any sort of synthesizer, analog or digital, including traditional sampling synthesizers, LPC synthesizers, FM synthesizers, physical modeling synthesizers, and additive synthesizers.