While looking at the enormous range of effects equipment and accessories that can be used to affect or help adjust the sound of an electric guitar, you may have come through a set of tools called effects associated with modulation. Modulation in his own little sense, and unless you are an experienced player Guitar, fair or know little about the music of electric guitar, you may wonder what they are modulation effects, how they work and.
One of the earliest examples of an effect from modulation was the speaker of rotation. Today the effect produced by a rotary speaker can be re-created electronically, but often these new electronic sounds can be labeled in a way that unless one knows that the original sound is coming, it is difficult to predict exactly what the purpose is to the effect. You can view digital systems that offers a rotating apparatus, or the modulation of rotation, but what is it exactly? The original rotation he was literally a loudspeaker that rotates round. Physically by rotating around the speaker, a Doppler effect can be produced (as if walking around the same speaker, with the sound increasingly removed, and then winning in volume, while at the same time move from left to right. )
Physically turn the speaker in this way is not always possible - with cables and leads to sometimes be quite complex, and the sheer weight of the speaker system's security or prevention of work with ease. In these cases the same kind of effect was achieved by putting a rotation on the front baffle of the speaker. This directs the sound from left to right, and then covered completely before opening again from the left. This creates the same effect with Doppler sound, and posting of extinction at the same time.
You may already have heard of these effects of rotation, or used yourself in a digital system. Very likely you may very well not have done exactly what the sound was trying to achieve - but by the display of the rotating speaker, you can understand what the sound is achieved, and be more critical when listening to this impact and decide on the parameters used.
By speeding up the rotation for this effect, a number of other effects that can be achieved - many of them perhaps the name rather strangely. Accelerate the turnover of modulation can be translated into any of a host of other qualities of sound, such as flanging, phasing, chorus, vibrato and, in some cases, tremolo. There are various combinations of the use of this effect - as the speaker Leslie who has a subwoofer unit, which includes a deflector rotation within the unit, with a previous speaker horn, which actually turns oneself fully. These speakers produce a unique mix of the real effects that the sound achieved is virtually impossible to reproduce accurately electronically.
Fender also produced a loudspeaker that incorporates a deflector rotation in the interior of the cabinet himself, but does not include a rotating horn. Modern digital ways to recreate this sound effect based on the manipulation of sound in three factors - the speed of sound produced, the volume and modulation. It might seem odd to consider the speed of sound is important - after all, you can not imagine that the notes could come much faster you play the electric guitar.
However, the Doppler effect is based entirely on the speed of sound. As an object, like an ambulance siren, who comes towards you is pushing the sound waves in front of him faster, while those who are behind the vehicle that happens to you and travels farther dragged out, creating waves Sound slower. The speed of the sound wave affects their height - that is the change in frequency we hear the Doppler effect. The rotation of the rotating baffle speaker or re-create this by pushing or pulling the sound waves as the sound is good pushes you, as it turns in their direction, or thrown away as the baffle cover the sound and projects more far.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Electric Guitar Modulation Effects
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