FWIW that's this in SuperCollider: var outerEnv = http://EnvGen.kr (Env([0, 1, 0], [0.01, 2])); var freqEnv = http://EnvGen.kr (Env([8000, 400], [2])); var mod = http://LFPulse.ar (10, 0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.0); http://SinOsc.ar (mod * freqEnv, 0, 0.2) * outerEnv
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Until someone finds a name for it I'm calling it 'ochitenaishi'. And if you know why you get a cookie (or a frozen mikan).
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Here are some examples of it showing up in songs. Note how they're all the same pattern of a square wave LFO plus a pitch envelope (a tone switching quickly between two frequencies, falling overall)pic.twitter.com/GUX1z4KHt7
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i’ve always associated it with shooting star glitters
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Hey
@darkesword,@inversephase, do either of you have any knowledge about this? -
it sounds like nyquist frequency abuse to me?
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the piano equivalent would be something like a glissando but i don't know if there's a more appropriate term for this variation
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It's not a glissando, the effect is specifically a pitch-bend down oscillator that is modulated by some interval using a square wave LFO. The individual "bleeps" alternate between high and low and are not single notes but a smooth curve that is just broken up regularly.
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Just a linear pitch drop with a gate to give that studder effect
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I know how to make it, I want to know if it has a name that isn't purely descriptive :-)
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