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Cross-Synthesis
Cross-synthesis is the technique of impressing the
spectral envelope of one sound on the flattened spectrum of another.
A typical example is to impress speech on various natural
sounds, such as ``talking wind.'' Let's call the first signal the
``modulating'' signal, and the other the ``carrier'' signal. Then the
modulator may be a voice, and the carrier may be any spectrally rich
sound such as wind, rain, creaking noises, flute, or other musical
instrument sound. Commercial ``vocoders''
(§G.10,§G.5) used as musical instruments consist of
a keyboard synthesizer (for playing the carrier sounds) and a
microphone for picking up the voice of the performer (to extract the
modulation envelope).
Cross-synthesis may be summarized as consisting of the following steps:
- Perform a Short-Time Fourier Transform (STFT) of both the
modulator and carrier signals (§7.1).
- Compute the spectral envelope of each time-frame (as described
in the next section).
- Optionally divide the spectrum of each carrier frame by its own
spectral envelope, thereby flattening it.
- Multiply the flattened spectral frame by the envelope of the
corresponding modulator frame, thereby replacing the carrier's
envelope by the modulator's envelope.
For an audio example of cross-synthesis (a ``talking organ''), see
http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/SpecEnv/Application_Example_Cross_Synthesis.html
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