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12:19 AM
@flawr So, hard-clipping does not sound not harsh enough for you? :-)
It's a cool idea!
It would be interesting to analyze how the harmonic content is affected by this "overclipping" (or is it "underclipping?"...). Does it produce more of the high harmonics?
A weird effect would be that hitting the strings more strongly could result in less volume
That reminds me of how very saturated valve amps (actually emulations thereof, in my case) behave. You can notice the volume going down with very aggressie playing. As if the amp was begging for mercy :-D
Here you can hear this volume "drop" that I'm referring to. It seems to me like each note has a normal attack but then the volume quickly drops and stabilizes. Like a slow compressor acting on the signal
(Wonderful melody, by the way! The full "Ragged glory" album is great)
 
 
8 hours later…
8:05 AM
@LuisMendo Consider the red curve: If the input was a sine wave with an amplitude of two sections (horizontal) you'd get something close to a sine wave but with double the frequency. And as you said, the harmonic content would largely depend the amplitude, I don't think I want to derive it analytically :D
 
 
3 hours later…
11:35 AM
Yes, numerically would be easier :-)
 

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