Download Real-Time Black-Box Modelling With Recurrent Neural Networks This paper proposes to use a recurrent neural network for black-box modelling of nonlinear audio systems, such as tube amplifiers and distortion pedals. As a recurrent unit structure, we test both Long Short-Term Memory and a Gated Recurrent Unit. We compare the proposed neural network with a WaveNet-style deep neural network, which has been suggested previously for tube amplifier modelling. The neural networks are trained with several minutes of guitar and bass recordings, which have been passed through the devices to be modelled. A real-time audio plugin implementing the proposed networks has been developed in the JUCE framework. It is shown that the recurrent neural networks achieve similar accuracy to the WaveNet model, while requiring significantly less processing power to run. The Long Short-Term Memory recurrent unit is also found to outperform the Gated Recurrent Unit overall. The proposed neural network is an important step forward in computationally efficient yet accurate emulation of tube amplifiers and distortion pedals.
Download Neural Modelling of Time-Varying Effects This paper proposes a grey-box neural network based approach
to modelling LFO modulated time-varying effects.
The neural
network model receives both the unprocessed audio, as well as
the LFO signal, as input. This allows complete control over the
model’s LFO frequency and shape. The neural networks are trained
using guitar audio, which has to be processed by the target effect
and also annotated with the predicted LFO signal before training.
A measurement signal based on regularly spaced chirps was used
to accurately predict the LFO signal. The model architecture has
been previously shown to be capable of running in real-time on a
modern desktop computer, whilst using relatively little processing
power. We validate our approach creating models of both a phaser
and a flanger effects pedal, and theoretically it can be applied to
any LFO modulated time-varying effect. In the best case, an errorto-signal ratio of 1.3% is achieved when modelling a flanger pedal,
and previous work has shown that this corresponds to the model
being nearly indistinguishable from the target device.
Download Virtual Analog Modeling of Distortion Circuits Using Neural Ordinary Differential Equations Recent research in deep learning has shown that neural networks can learn differential equations governing dynamical systems. In this paper, we adapt this concept to Virtual Analog (VA) modeling to learn the ordinary differential equations (ODEs) governing the first-order and the second-order diode clipper. The proposed models achieve performance comparable to state-of-the-art recurrent neural networks (RNNs) albeit using fewer parameters. We show that this approach does not require oversampling and allows to increase the sampling rate after the training has completed, which results in increased accuracy. Using a sophisticated numerical solver allows to increase the accuracy at the cost of slower processing. ODEs learned this way do not require closed forms but are still physically interpretable.
Download Grey-Box Modelling of Dynamic Range Compression This paper explores the digital emulation of analog dynamic range compressors, proposing a grey-box model that uses a combination of traditional signal processing techniques and machine learning. The main idea is to use the structure of a traditional digital compressor in a machine learning framework, so it can be trained end-to-end to create a virtual analog model of a compressor from data. The complexity of the model can be adjusted, allowing a trade-off between the model accuracy and computational cost. The proposed model has interpretable components, so its behaviour can be controlled more readily after training in comparison to a black-box model. The result is a model that achieves similar accuracy to a black-box baseline, whilst requiring less than 10% of the number of operations per sample at runtime.
Download Neural Modeling of Magnetic Tape Recorders The sound of magnetic recording media, such as open-reel and cassette tape recorders, is still sought after by today’s sound practitioners due to the imperfections embedded in the physics of the magnetic recording process. This paper proposes a method for digitally emulating this character using neural networks. The signal chain of the proposed system consists of three main components: the hysteretic nonlinearity and filtering jointly produced by the magnetic recording process as well as the record and playback amplifiers, the fluctuating delay originating from the tape transport, and the combined additive noise component from various electromagnetic origins. In our approach, the hysteretic nonlinear block is modeled using a recurrent neural network, while the delay trajectories and the noise component are generated using separate diffusion models, which employ U-net deep convolutional neural networks. According to the conducted objective evaluation, the proposed architecture faithfully captures the character of the magnetic tape recorder. The results of this study can be used to construct virtual replicas of vintage sound recording devices with applications in music production and audio antiquing tasks.
Download Neural Grey-Box Guitar Amplifier Modelling with Limited Data This paper combines recurrent neural networks (RNNs) with the discretised Kirchhoff nodal analysis (DK-method) to create a grey-box guitar amplifier model. Both the objective and subjective results suggest that the proposed model is able to outperform a baseline black-box RNN model in the task of modelling a guitar amplifier, including realistically recreating the behaviour of the amplifier equaliser circuit, whilst requiring significantly less training data. Furthermore, we adapt the linear part of the DK-method in a deep learning scenario to derive multiple state-space filters simultaneously. We frequency sample the filter transfer functions in parallel and perform frequency domain filtering to considerably reduce the required training times compared to recursive state-space filtering. This study shows that it is a powerful idea to separately model the linear and nonlinear parts of a guitar amplifier using supervised learning.
Download Sample Rate Independent Recurrent Neural Networks for Audio Effects Processing In recent years, machine learning approaches to modelling guitar amplifiers and effects pedals have been widely investigated and have become standard practice in some consumer products. In particular, recurrent neural networks (RNNs) are a popular choice for modelling non-linear devices such as vacuum tube amplifiers and distortion circuitry. One limitation of such models is that they are trained on audio at a specific sample rate and therefore give unreliable results when operating at another rate. Here, we investigate several methods of modifying RNN structures to make them approximately sample rate independent, with a focus on oversampling. In the case of integer oversampling, we demonstrate that a previously proposed delay-based approach provides high fidelity sample rate conversion whilst additionally reducing aliasing. For non-integer sample rate adjustment, we propose two novel methods and show that one of these, based on cubic Lagrange interpolation of a delay-line, provides a significant improvement over existing methods. To our knowledge, this work provides the first in-depth study into this problem.
Download Anti-Aliasing of Neural Distortion Effects via Model Fine Tuning Neural networks have become ubiquitous with guitar distortion
effects modelling in recent years. Despite their ability to yield
perceptually convincing models, they are susceptible to frequency
aliasing when driven by high frequency and high gain inputs.
Nonlinear activation functions create both the desired harmonic
distortion and unwanted aliasing distortion as the bandwidth of
the signal is expanded beyond the Nyquist frequency. Here, we
present a method for reducing aliasing in neural models via a
teacher-student fine tuning approach, where the teacher is a pretrained model with its weights frozen, and the student is a copy of
this with learnable parameters. The student is fine-tuned against
an aliasing-free dataset generated by passing sinusoids through
the original model and removing non-harmonic components from
the output spectra.
Our results show that this method significantly suppresses aliasing for both long-short-term-memory networks (LSTM) and temporal convolutional networks (TCN). In the
majority of our case studies, the reduction in aliasing was greater
than that achieved by two times oversampling. One side-effect
of the proposed method is that harmonic distortion components
are also affected.
This adverse effect was found to be modeldependent, with the LSTM models giving the best balance between
anti-aliasing and preserving the perceived similarity to an analog
reference device.
Download Learning Nonlinear Dynamics in Physical Modelling Synthesis Using Neural Ordinary Differential Equations Modal synthesis methods are a long-standing approach for modelling distributed musical systems. In some cases extensions are
possible in order to handle geometric nonlinearities. One such
case is the high-amplitude vibration of a string, where geometric nonlinear effects lead to perceptually important effects including pitch glides and a dependence of brightness on striking amplitude. A modal decomposition leads to a coupled nonlinear system of ordinary differential equations. Recent work in applied machine learning approaches (in particular neural ordinary differential equations) has been used to model lumped dynamic systems
such as electronic circuits automatically from data. In this work,
we examine how modal decomposition can be combined with neural ordinary differential equations for modelling distributed musical systems. The proposed model leverages the analytical solution
for linear vibration of system’s modes and employs a neural network to account for nonlinear dynamic behaviour. Physical parameters of a system remain easily accessible after the training without
the need for a parameter encoder in the network architecture. As
an initial proof of concept, we generate synthetic data for a nonlinear transverse string and show that the model can be trained to
reproduce the nonlinear dynamics of the system. Sound examples
are presented.
Download Unsupervised Estimation of Nonlinear Audio Effects: Comparing Diffusion-Based and Adversarial Approaches Accurately estimating nonlinear audio effects without access to
paired input-output signals remains a challenging problem. This
work studies unsupervised probabilistic approaches for solving this
task. We introduce a method, novel for this application, based
on diffusion generative models for blind system identification, enabling the estimation of unknown nonlinear effects using blackand gray-box models. This study compares this method with a
previously proposed adversarial approach, analyzing the performance of both methods under different parameterizations of the
effect operator and varying lengths of available effected recordings. Through experiments on guitar distortion effects, we show
that the diffusion-based approach provides more stable results and
is less sensitive to data availability, while the adversarial approach
is superior at estimating more pronounced distortion effects. Our
findings contribute to the robust unsupervised blind estimation of
audio effects, demonstrating the potential of diffusion models for
system identification in music technology.