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The digital waveguide modeling paradigm was developed in
1985-86 as a guaranteed-stable ``construction kit'' for lossless
reverberator prototypes supporting general feedback topologies
[434]. The following year, digital waveguide building
blocks were extended to vibrating strings and single-cylinder acoustic
tubes (principally for the clarinet family) [435]. A modular
synthesis architecture was developed in which various ``nonlinear
junctions'' could be used to excite digital waveguide networks of
general design. The iterative Friedlander-Keller solver of
[311] was replaced by a look-up table plus a couple of
additions and a multiply, facilitating sound synthesis in real time.
This computational model was presented, with sound examples, at the
1986 ICMC, and it so happened that Yamaha's chief engineer was in the
audience. Perhaps significantly, the FM synthesis patent was nearing
the end of its life. Yamaha soon hired some consultants to evaluate
waveguide synthesis, and in 1989 they began a strenuous development
effort culminating in the VL1 (``Virtual Lead'') synthesizer family,
introduced in the U.S. at the 1994 NAMM show in LA. The jazz trio
demonstrating the VL1 at NAMM created quite a ``buzz'', and the cover
of Keyboard Magazine soon proclaimed it as ``The Next Big Thing'' in
synthesis technology [378]. As it happened, physical
modeling synthesis did not immediately meet with large commercial
success, perhaps because wavetable synthesis required less computation
and was so much easier to ``voice'', and because memory was fairly
inexpensive. The market at large simply has not yet demanded more
expressive sound synthesis algorithms than what wavetable synthesis
can provide. However, the quality of the VL1 in the hands of skilled
players constituted proof-of-concept for many of us, and helped
stimulate further academic interest in the approach. Trained
performing musicians generally prefer the expressive richness of a
computational physical model, and find wavetable synthesis to be
comparatively limiting, as typically implemented.
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