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Vibrato Simulation
The term vibrato refers to small, quasi-periodic variations in
the pitch of a tone. On a violin, for example, vibrato is
produced by wiggling the finger stopping the string on the
fingerboard; a violin vibrato frequency can be very slow, or a bit
faster than 6 Hz. A typical vibrato depth is on the order of 1
percent (a semitone is
percent). In the
singing voice, vibrato is produced by modulating the tension of the
vocal folds. Vibrato is typically accompanied by
tremolo, which is amplitude modulation at the same
frequency as the vibrato which causes it. For example, in the violin,
the frequency-modulations of the string vibrations are translated into
amplitude modulations by the complex variations in the frequency
response of the violin body.
To apply vibrato to a sound, it is necessary to apply a quasi-periodic
frequency shift. This can be accomplish using a
modulated delay line. This works because a time-varying delay
line induces a simulated
Doppler shift on the signal within it.
The flanger in effect.lib (Faust distribution) has a vibrato
mode in which it becomes a pure time-varying delay line. This mode
can be accessed via a checkbox in the example
phaser_flanger.dsp.
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