Download RIR2FDN: An Improved Room Impulse Response Analysis and Synthesis This paper seeks to improve the state-of-the-art in delay-networkbased analysis-synthesis of measured room impulse responses (RIRs). We propose an informed method incorporating improved energy decay estimation and synthesis with an optimized feedback delay network. The performance of the presented method is compared against an end-to-end deep-learning approach. A formal listening test was conducted where participants assessed the similarity of reverberated material across seven distinct RIRs and three different sound sources. The results reveal that the performance of these methods is influenced by both the excitation sounds and the reverberation conditions. Nonetheless, the proposed method consistently demonstrates higher similarity ratings compared to the end-to-end approach across most conditions. However, achieving an indistinguishable synthesis of measured RIRs remains a persistent challenge, underscoring the complexity of this problem. Overall, this work helps improve the sound quality of analysis-based artificial reverberation.
Download A Real-Time Approach for Estimating Pulse Tracking Parameters for Beat-Synchronous Audio Effects Predominant Local Pulse (PLP) estimation, an established method for extracting beat positions and other periodic pulse information from audio signals, has recently been extended with an online variant tailored for real-time applications. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach to generating various real-time control signals from the original online PLP output. While the PLP activation function encodes both predominant pulse information and pulse stability, we propose several normalization procedures to discern local pulse oscillation from stability, utilizing the PLP activation envelope. Through this, we generate pulse-synchronous Low Frequency Oscillators (LFOs) and supplementary confidence-based control signals, enabling dynamic control over audio effect parameters in real-time. Additionally, our approach enables beat position prediction, providing a look-ahead capability, for example, to compensate for system latency. To showcase the effectiveness of our control signals, we introduce an audio plugin prototype designed for integration within a Digital Audio Workstation (DAW), facilitating real-time applications of beat-synchronous effects during live mixing and performances. Moreover, this plugin serves as an educational tool, providing insights into PLP principles and the tempo structure of analyzed music signals.
Download Wave Digital Model of the MXR Phase 90 Based on a Time-Varying Resistor Approximation of JFET Elements Virtual Analog (VA) modeling is the practice of digitally emulating analog audio gear. Over the past few years, with the purpose of recreating the alleged distinctive sound of audio equipment and musicians, many different guitar pedals have been emulated by means of the VA paradigm but little attention has been given to phasers. Phasers process the spectrum of the input signal with time-varying notches by means of shifting stages typically realized with a network of transistors, whose nonlinear equations are, in general, demanding to be solved. In this paper, we take as a reference the famous MXR Phase 90 guitar pedal, and we propose an efficient time-varying model of its Junction Field-Effect Transistors (JFETs) based on a channel resistance approximation. We then employ such a model in the Wave Digital domain to emulate in real-time the guitar pedal, obtaining an implementation characterized by low computational cost and good accuracy.