I'm trying to learn to write a wah-wah sound effect. Just for fun really :)
So far, I've done a lot of research, and this page explains it the best. http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folders/wahpedl/voicewah.htm
Basically, I'm just looking for any simple C++ examples to generate a Wah-wah (ooaaooaa) effect.
Eventually once this is done, I hope to be able to also create a "eeeoooeeeoo" effect, or a "eeaaeeaa" effect :) Sort of vowel sythnthesis, but for music.
If I find any good examples I'll link to them here.
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I'm having trouble with the mathematical side of things.
What waves do I need to generate to make an "E" sound? What waves do I need to generate to make a "O" sound?
I did try making two frequencies, with harmonics, according to that page, and adjusting the two frequencies, but it still sounded like electronic beeps, not vowels.
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http://www.acoustics.hut.fi/publications/files/theses/lemmetty_mst/chap3.html This seems good. There are some numbers I can use. Hopefully it will sound "vowelish".
EDIT: I tried making some sounds at those frequencies mentioned on the page (100hz,600hz,1000hz,2500hz). It did not sound "vowelish". Maybe very slightly, but not properly.
So obviously I need to do more frequencies to make a proper "a" sound. Although I'm not sure WHAT frequencies.
I COULD just record my own voice. And then maybe download some otherpeople speaking vowels. And then find a spectrum analyser app. But I tried searching for a spectrum analyser app, and the first one I found wouldn't work on sound files just microphone input. Seems like it will be a lot more work trying to find a spectrum analyser app that does what I need. I might need to write my own.
Shame I can't find a resource with a list of requencies to generate a certain vowel from... just so I can LEARN from this. And then using that knowledge, develop a "vowel filter" that works like a wahwah but with "ioio" or "eaea" sounds.
Right now, the amount of effort I need to do:
- download good vowels
- test perhaps 4 apps to see if it can analyse frequency spectrums from a file
- generate the frequencies from that spectrum
- test the frequencies to see if it sounds "vowel-like"
Its not really "fun" anymore. Its work. Shame. As I have other (real) work to be doing. I'll park this one until I find enough answers that will make this project fun to work on.
