Download Keytar: Melodic control of multisensory feedback from virtual strings A multisensory virtual environment has been designed, aiming at recreating a realistic interaction with a set of vibrating strings. Haptic, auditory and visual cues progressively istantiate the environment: force and tactile feedback are provided by a robotic arm reporting for string reaction, string surface properties, and furthermore defining the physical touchpoint in form of a virtual plectrum embodied by the arm stylus. Auditory feedback is instantaneously synthesized as a result of the contacts of this plectrum against the strings, reproducing guitar sounds. A simple visual scenario contextualizes the plectrum in action along with the vibrating strings. Notes and chords are selected using a keyboard controller, in ways that one hand is engaged in the creation of a melody while the other hand plucks virtual strings. Such components have been integrated within the Unity3D simulation environment for game development, and run altogether on a PC. As also declared by a group of users testing a monophonic Keytar prototype with no keyboard control, the most significant contribution to the realism of the strings is given by the haptic feedback, in particular by the textural nuances that the robotic arm synthesizes while reproducing physical attributes of a metal surface. Their opinion, hence, argues in favor of the importance of factors others than auditory feedback for the design of new musical interfaces.
Download Statistical Sinusoidal Modeling for Expressive Sound Synthesis Statistical sinusoidal modeling represents a method for transferring a sample library of instrument sounds into a data base of sinusoidal parameters for the use in real time additive synthesis. Single sounds, capturing an instrument in combinations of pitch and intensity, are therefor segmented into attack, sustain and release. Partial amplitudes, frequencies and Bark band energies are calculated for all sounds and segments. For the sustain part, all partial and noise parameters are transformed to probabilistic distributions. Interpolated inverse transform sampling is introduced for generating parameter trajectories during synthesis in real time, allowing the creation of sounds located at pitches and intensities between the actual support points of the sample library. Evaluation is performed by qualitative analysis of the system response to sweeps of the control parameters pitch and intensity. Results for a set of violin samples demonstrate the ability of the approach to model dynamic timbre changes, which is crucial for the perceived quality of expressive sound synthesis.
Download Sound texture synthesis using Convolutional Neural Networks The following article introduces a new parametric synthesis algorithm for sound textures inspired by existing methods used for visual textures. Using a 2D Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), a sound signal is modified until the temporal cross-correlations of the feature maps of its log-spectrogram resemble those of a target texture. We show that the resulting synthesized sound signal is both different from the original and of high quality, while being able to reproduce singular events appearing in the original. This process is performed in the time domain, discarding the harmful phase recovery step which usually concludes synthesis performed in the time-frequency domain. It is also straightforward and flexible, as it does not require any fine tuning between several losses when synthesizing diverse sound textures. Synthesized spectrograms and sound signals are showcased, and a way of extending the synthesis in order to produce a sound of any length is also presented. We also discuss the choice of CNN, border effects in our synthesized signals and possible ways of modifying the algorithm in order to improve its current long computation time.
Download Assisted Sound Sample Generation with Musical Conditioning in Adversarial Auto-Encoders Deep generative neural networks have thrived in the field of computer vision, enabling unprecedented intelligent image processes. Yet the results in audio remain less advanced and many applications are still to be investigated. Our project targets real-time sound synthesis from a reduced set of high-level parameters, including semantic controls that can be adapted to different sound libraries and specific tags. These generative variables should allow expressive modulations of target musical qualities and continuously mix into new styles. To this extent we train auto-encoders on an orchestral database of individual note samples, along with their intrinsic attributes: note class, timbre domain (an instrument subset) and extended playing techniques. We condition the decoder for explicit control over the rendered note attributes and use latent adversarial training for learning expressive style parameters that can ultimately be mixed. We evaluate both generative performances and correlations of the attributes with the latent representation. Our ablation study demonstrates the effectiveness of the musical conditioning. The proposed model generates individual notes as magnitude spectrograms from any probabilistic latent code samples (each latent point maps to a single note), with expressive control of orchestral timbres and playing styles. Its training data subsets can directly be visualized in the 3-dimensional latent representation. Waveform rendering can be done offline with the Griffin-Lim algorithm. In order to allow real-time interactions, we fine-tune the decoder with a pretrained magnitude spectrogram inversion network and embed the full waveform generation pipeline in a plugin. Moreover the encoder could be used to process new input samples, after manipulating their latent attribute representation, the decoder can generate sample variations as an audio effect would. Our solution remains rather light-weight and fast to train, it can directly be applied to other sound domains, including an user’s libraries with custom sound tags that could be mapped to specific generative controls. As a result, it fosters creativity and intuitive audio style experimentations. Sound examples and additional visualizations are available on Github1, as well as codes after the review process.
Download Universal Audio Synthesizer Control with Normalizing Flows The ubiquity of sound synthesizers have reshaped music production and even entirely define new music genres. However, the increasing complexity and number of parameters in modern synthesizers make them harder to master. Hence, the development of methods allowing to easily create and explore with synthesizers is a crucial need. Here, we introduce a radically novel formulation of audio synthesizer control by formalizing it as finding an organized continuous latent space of audio that represents the capabilities of a synthesizer and map this space to the space of synthesis parameter. By using this formulation, we show that we can address simultaneously automatic parameter inference, macro-control learning and audio-based preset exploration within a single model. To solve this new formulation, we rely on Variational Auto-Encoders (VAE) and Normalizing Flows (NF) to organize and map the respective auditory and parameter spaces. We introduce a new type of NF named regression flows that allow to perform an invertible mapping between separate latent spaces, while steering the organization of some of the latent dimensions. We evaluate our proposal against a large set of baseline models and show its superiority in both parameter inference and audio reconstruction. We also show that the model disentangles the major factors of audio variations as latent dimensions, that can be directly used as macro-parameters. Finally, we discuss the use of our model in several creative applications and introduce real-time implementations in Ableton Live
Download Cross-Modal Variational Inference for Bijective Signal-Symbol Translation Extraction of symbolic information from signals is an active field of research enabling numerous applications especially in the Musical Information Retrieval domain. This complex task, that is also related to other topics such as pitch extraction or instrument recognition, is a demanding subject that gave birth to numerous approaches, mostly based on advanced signal processing-based algorithms. However, these techniques are often non-generic, allowing the extraction of definite physical properties of the signal (pitch, octave), but not allowing arbitrary vocabularies or more general annotations. On top of that, these techniques are one-sided, meaning that they can extract symbolic data from an audio signal, but cannot perform the reverse process and make symbol-to-signal generation. In this paper, we propose an bijective approach for signal/symbol translation by turning this problem into a density estimation task over signal and symbolic domains, considered both as related random variables. We estimate this joint distribution with two different variational auto-encoders, one for each domain, whose inner representations are forced to match with an additive constraint, allowing both models to learn and generate separately while allowing signal-to-symbol and symbol-to-signal inference. In this article, we test our models on pitch, octave and dynamics symbols, which comprise a fundamental step towards music transcription and label-constrained audio generation. In addition to its versatility, this system is rather light during training and generation while allowing several interesting creative uses that we outline at the end of the article.
Download Exploring the Sound of Chaotic Oscillators via Parameter Spaces Chaotic oscillators are exciting sources for sound production due to their simplicity in implementation combined with their rich sonic output. However, the richness comes with difficulty of control, which is paramount to both their detailed understanding and in live musical performance. In this paper, we propose perceptually motivated parameter planes as a framework for studying the behavior of chaotic oscillators for musical use. Motivated by analysis via winding numbers, we extend traditional study of chaotic oscillators by using local features that are perceptually inspired. We illustrate the framework on the example of variations of the circle map. However, the framework is applicable for a wide range of sound synthesis algorithms with nontrivial parametric mappings.
Download Large-scale Real-time Modular Physical Modeling Sound Synthesis Due to recent increases in computational power, physical modeling synthesis is now possible in real time even for relatively complex models. We present here a modular physical modeling instrument design, intended as a construction framework for string- and bar- based instruments, alongside a mechanical network allowing for arbitrary nonlinear interconnection. When multiple nonlinearities are present in a feedback setting, there are two major concerns. One is ensuring numerical stability, which can be approached using an energy-based framework. The other is coping with the computational cost associated with nonlinear solvers—standard iterative methods, such as Newton-Raphson, quickly become a computational bottleneck. Here, such iterative methods are sidestepped using an alternative energy conserving method, allowing for great reduction in computational expense or, alternatively, to real-time performance for very large-scale nonlinear physical modeling synthesis. Simulation and benchmarking results are presented.
Download A perceptually inspired generative model of rigid-body contact sounds Contact between rigid-body objects produces a diversity of impact and friction sounds. These sounds can be synthesized with detailed simulations of the motion, vibration and sound radiation of the objects, but such synthesis is computationally expensive and prohibitively slow for many applications. Moreover, detailed physical simulations may not be necessary for perceptually compelling synthesis; humans infer ecologically relevant causes of sound, such as material categories, but not with arbitrary precision. We present a generative model of impact sounds which summarizes the effect of physical variables on acoustic features via statistical distributions fit to empirical measurements of object acoustics. Perceptual experiments show that sampling from these distributions allows efficient synthesis of realistic impact and scraping sounds that convey material, mass, and motion.
Download Modelling Experts’ Decisions on Assigning Narrative Importances of Objects in a Radio Drama Mix There is an increasing number of consumers of broadcast audio who suffer from a degree of hearing impairment. One of the methods developed for tackling this issue consists of creating customizable object-based audio mixes where users can attenuate parts of the mix using a simple complexity parameter. The method relies on the mixing engineer classifying audio objects in the mix according to their narrative importance. This paper focuses on automating this process. Individual tracks are classified based on their music, speech, or sound effect content. Then the decisions for assigning narrative importance to each segment of a radio drama mix are modelled using mixture distributions. Finally, the learned decisions and resultant mixes are evaluated using the Short Term Objective Intelligibility, with reference to the narrative importance selections made by the original producer. This approach has applications for providing customizable mixes for legacy content, or automatically generated media content where the engineer is not able to intervene.