<I began what there is of my career emulating natural sounds (hear our
first Warner Brother's record, In A Wild Sanctuary, 1970, and which
is still available) on synthesizer and quickly found that nothing can
compare, aurally, creatively, aesthetically, texturally, to the
melifluous and delicate fabric of what already exists within the fold
of the natural world. Yeah. We're pretty good at getting close, but
it still ain't a Cuban cigar, folks.>
Hear, hear!! We are very good at plastic imitations and my god, there are
plenty out there, but the greatest songster has got to be Mother Nature
playing her own piano!!
Martyn :)
Martyn Stewart
Bird and Animal Sounds Digitally Recorded at:
http://www.naturesound.org
N47.65543 W121.98428
Redmond. Washington. USA
Make every Garden a wildlife Habitat!
The Spring is cum=20
The grass is riz=20
I wonder where the birdies is?
The birdies on the wing!
Nah, that's absoid
D' wing is on d' boid!
...........................................................................=
.
........
-----Original Message-----
From: Wild Sanctuary
Sent: Saturday, April 10, 2004 10:07 AM
To:
Subject: Re: [Nature Recordists] emulating birdsong with a synthesiser
design program
Reminds me of a call I got from the Disney folks a couple of years
ago after sending me on a trip to Costa Rica to record natural sounds
for a project they were doing. The fellow who called (a friend and
colleague who will remain nameless) was desperate. He had just
received a memo from Disney corporate ordering him to empty out and
destroy the contents the storage room where they had collected one of
the most unbelievable archives of sound that began in 1938. Aside
from efx, it included rare birds, natural soundscapes, mammals,
insects, etc., etc. When he asked why, corporate apparently responded
that any 8-year old with a Mac and midi synth could recreate the
sound of a rainforest or a desert, that the room was needed for
storage, and they therefore didn't need the collection any more. It
was ordered destroyed. I was called in an attempt to rescue the
collection, but I had no room where we live and breathe for more than
what we have. As far as I know, it's gone now.
I began what there is of my career emulating natural sounds (hear our
first Warner Brother's record, In A Wild Sanctuary, 1970, and which
is still available) on synthesizer and quickly found that nothing can
compare, aurally, creatively, aesthetically, texturally, to the
melifluous and delicate fabric of what already exists within the fold
of the natural world. Yeah. We're pretty good at getting close, but
it still ain't a Cuban cigar, folks.
Bernie
>one goal I have in constructing synthesisers is to emulate natural sounds,
>for example the soundscape of the jungle or of temperate forests. A lot o=
f
>birds have almost pure sinewave voices, which have various pitch and timbr=
e
>profiles, that can be emulated I think using low-frequency
>oscillators, because this
>would be good parallel to the movement of the birds voice box.
>
>I'm very interested in emulating natural sounds, I had a lot of success
with
>one sketch synthesiser which he used frequency modulation synthesis
recorded
>and played back at various speeds.
>
>Does anyone have any links about birds acoustics and anatomy that could
help
>research for a bird synthesiser? The synthesis engine in question is
reaktor
>www.nativeinstruments.com
>
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
>"Microphones are not ears,
>Loudspeakers are not birds,
>A listening room is not nature."
>Klas Strandberg
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
--
Wild Sanctuary, Inc.
P. O. Box 536
Glen Ellen, California 95442-0536
Tel: (707) 996-6677
Fax: (707) 996-0280
http://www.wildsanctuary.com
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
"Microphones are not ears,
Loudspeakers are not birds,
A listening room is not nature."
Klas Strandberg
Yahoo! Groups Links
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