Hi Ingo
selfoscillate schrieb:
> some vocoders have a nice feature called "pause stuffing".
>
http://www.selfoscillate.de/forumfiles/pausestuffing.jpg
If I understand it right, it provides some amount of the carrier signal
to the modulator chain. This carrier2modulator signal is compressed by
the incoming modulator signal (e.g. voice in the standard usage).
What I do not understand: this "pause signal" will be assumingly a very
wobbly sound, because the changes of overtone will be exponentiated bye
the self vocoding. Does it really sound good
And @ggtonet:
Additionally to the other recommendations I'd like to add:
You should have compressors for the Vocoder. At least one. You can use
an external compressor or a combination of A175 Inverter and A130 linear
VCA as used in Ingos example.
Then I suggest a second A119 Ext-In, to reassure, that your carrier
signal is at a correct level. Typical studio line signals have lower
level than the internal signals of the A100. If you don't adopt the
signal level, you will have a bad signal to noise ratio.
Also I recommend a high pass filter. There are at least two usages for it:
1.) Mix a little bit of the high frequencies of the original modulator
signal to the output. This increases the understandability of vocoded
speech extremely (I have made the well know example for the A129
http://www.youtube.com/watch v=pLRgjzEjFkM
with this trick).
2.) taking away a littlebit of the bottom end of the modulator input
signal before the (recommended) compressor increases the overall "power"
of the final signal.
Florian