This was the most excellent talk. I'm not a trained engineer but a programmer / musician that codes music related stuff. Filter design has always looked like a dark art to me but this talk gave me some great intuition and confidence for moving forward with how to analyse filter code, filters in Reaktor itself etc. and hopefully for designing my own filters one day. Thank you Vadim! I'll check out your book for sure.
This is mind blowing.. NI is an academic empire! I glanced over Vadim's book, on NI website.. that book is incredibly rigorous! Now I have to add another NI product to my collection 🤣
We all saw his name in the "credit titles" when we click the NI synths' logo but now we have seen and listened to one of Kreators of Reaktor. ) We like Reaktor very much!...Russian accent is still present.)
Perhaps useful to mention in relation to the question on uniquely digital filters would be things like FFT processors, or physical modelling (modal resonators)... indeed, Autotune is a good example of a filter that clearly is very much of the digital domain. I agree that the kind of filter discussed here are interesting, and that the digital domain offers the ability to extend these methods far more easily than analog, but the filter demonstrated here could be seen as a prototype for a type of filter that could be built electronically with no particular obstacles and that may indeed ultimately sound better that way.
I love how he gets done with that talk and then gets a question like, "My CPU is overloading, what do I do?" at 58:00. I had to stop, I was cringing too hard at the question.
Deep stuff but people are right that reaktor right now uses too much cpu, also the whole sample stuff needs fixed to be updated ie the granular/resynth and wavetable stuff
Well thank god we don't model every analog behavior as digital synths don't detune unintended ;-) About the question if it is feasible: I think U-He does component based, spice like, modeling. Their Prophet sounds like no other software synth before, but also uses Cpu like nothing before ;-)
This was the most excellent talk. I'm not a trained engineer but a programmer / musician that codes music related stuff. Filter design has always looked like a dark art to me but this talk gave me some great intuition and confidence for moving forward with how to analyse filter code, filters in Reaktor itself etc. and hopefully for designing my own filters one day. Thank you Vadim! I'll check out your book for sure.
An interesting talk about the development cycle of new features by the REAKOR team. Very good!!!
This is mind blowing.. NI is an academic empire! I glanced over Vadim's book, on NI website.. that book is incredibly rigorous! Now I have to add another NI product to my collection 🤣
We all saw his name in the "credit titles" when we click the NI synths' logo but now we have seen and listened to one of Kreators of Reaktor. ) We like Reaktor very much!...Russian accent is still present.)
If it wasn't for the Russians,, you'd be typing this in German.
Perhaps useful to mention in relation to the question on uniquely digital filters would be things like FFT processors, or physical modelling (modal resonators)... indeed, Autotune is a good example of a filter that clearly is very much of the digital domain.
I agree that the kind of filter discussed here are interesting, and that the digital domain offers the ability to extend these methods far more easily than analog, but the filter demonstrated here could be seen as a prototype for a type of filter that could be built electronically with no particular obstacles and that may indeed ultimately sound better that way.
great presentation, thanks vadim!
I love how he gets done with that talk and then gets a question like, "My CPU is overloading, what do I do?" at 58:00. I had to stop, I was cringing too hard at the question.
amazing video, bow down!
"I don't think you can really make an exact model of analog ever. It's just an infinite road" 1:10:04
With quantum computing, it could be possible.. even analogue has a discrete foundation on quantum level
Q&A starts at 53:57
love it!!
You know he's a genius when you see he's running Windows on a Mac. @10:04
=)
Are there even any good Reaktor Core tutorials out there? I think not.
Reaktortutorials.com is great, highly recommend
Deep stuff but people are right that reaktor right now uses too much cpu, also the whole sample stuff needs fixed to be updated ie the granular/resynth and wavetable stuff
brilliant
where and what did he study, anybody knows?
RTFM www.native-instruments.com/fileadmin/ni_media/downloads/pdf/VAFilterDesign_2.1.0.pdf and you are the way for DSP filter design😃.
haha dude, I got that already... I meant in college with the whole dsp thing and audio programming
I think that is what you mean www.linkedin.com/in/vadim-zavalishin-451bb812b have a look at this.
he wrote the damn book
Cpu meter looks well fed.
Well thank god we don't model every analog behavior as digital synths don't detune unintended ;-) About the question if it is feasible: I think U-He does component based, spice like, modeling. Their Prophet sounds like no other software synth before, but also uses Cpu like nothing before ;-)
@Robert w Moore's law is long dead. Nonetheless, modern desktop CPUs can handle quite a few instances. Mobile is a different topic, though.
reaktor has a very too small gui on my 4k monitor. unfortunately useless.
An hour of speak about a 4 pole filter.
Sht u need an engineer degree to use this