Hi guys - Hifibri wrote in his last post "By changing overtones you change the shape of the wave and the resulting sound." As I have tried to explain, the actual overtones do NOT change.
Al, you are probably correct about the amplitude of them changing, I would need to get out my acoustics books to make sure. However, since these overtones we are speaking of are not audible to the vast majority of even highly trained ears, changes in their amplitude then would not be audible either, and they would be very minute in any case (though some would argue that this does not mean the brain wouldn't perceive the change somehow). The actual amplitude of the total sound of course has a far greater effect on the waveform. You bring up a very interesting question, though. How a musician's subtle changes in timbre affect the waveform is something I would need to look up (certainly these changes obviously effect the waveform somehow) - but I am not sure that my books go into that much detail. What I can say is that there is no way a musician can deliberately change the volume of a specific overtone in his sound, so even if you are completely correct, there is unfortunately no practical application of this for actual live performance.
Regardless of what the answers to these questions are, things like what Al terms "hall effects" have a MUCH greater effect on the perception of "warmth" (Unsound is perfectly correct in his last post), and the recording itself has an even greater effect. The design of the audio equipment also has much to do with it - for instance, to bring up Onhwy61's point, many designers of digital processors routinely omit all harmonics above the range of human hearing, claiming what the ear can't hear it won't miss. Many of us beg to differ, and it has been proven that the brain can detect frequencies above what the ear can hear. LOL, am I now getting dangerously close to arguing against my point? This is a fascinating discussion, indeed.
Al, you are probably correct about the amplitude of them changing, I would need to get out my acoustics books to make sure. However, since these overtones we are speaking of are not audible to the vast majority of even highly trained ears, changes in their amplitude then would not be audible either, and they would be very minute in any case (though some would argue that this does not mean the brain wouldn't perceive the change somehow). The actual amplitude of the total sound of course has a far greater effect on the waveform. You bring up a very interesting question, though. How a musician's subtle changes in timbre affect the waveform is something I would need to look up (certainly these changes obviously effect the waveform somehow) - but I am not sure that my books go into that much detail. What I can say is that there is no way a musician can deliberately change the volume of a specific overtone in his sound, so even if you are completely correct, there is unfortunately no practical application of this for actual live performance.
Regardless of what the answers to these questions are, things like what Al terms "hall effects" have a MUCH greater effect on the perception of "warmth" (Unsound is perfectly correct in his last post), and the recording itself has an even greater effect. The design of the audio equipment also has much to do with it - for instance, to bring up Onhwy61's point, many designers of digital processors routinely omit all harmonics above the range of human hearing, claiming what the ear can't hear it won't miss. Many of us beg to differ, and it has been proven that the brain can detect frequencies above what the ear can hear. LOL, am I now getting dangerously close to arguing against my point? This is a fascinating discussion, indeed.