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Chorus Effect
The chorus effect (or ``choralizer'') is any signal processor
which makes one sound source (such as a voice) sound like many
such sources singing (or playing) in unison. Since performance
in unison is never exact, chorus effects simulate this by making
independently modified copies of the input signal. Modifications may
include
- (1)
- delay,
- (2)
- frequency shift, and
- (3)
- amplitude modulation.
The typical chorus effect today is based on several
time-varying delay lines which accomplishes (1)
and (2) in a qualitative fashion. Reverb generally provides (3)
incidentally. Before digital delay lines, analog LC ladder networks
were used as an approximation, beginning in the early 1940s in the
Hammond organ [59, p. 731].
An efficient chorus-effect implementation may be based on
multiple interpolating taps working on a single delay line. The taps
oscillate back and forth about the positions they would have while
implementing a fixed tapped delay line. The tap modulation frequency
may be set to achieve a prescribed frequency-shift via the Doppler
effect. Each tap should be individually spatialized; in the case of
stereo, each tap can be panned to its own stereo position.
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