Ambisonics – the Once and Future System? [Leeds]
Title: Ambisonics – the Once and Future System? [Leeds]
Location: Lecture Theatre 1, School of Music, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT
Description: Lecture by Dave Malham, Music Research Centre, University of York
Start Time: 18:00 for 18:30
Date: Tuesday 21st February 2012
Abstract:
Ambisonics has been around as a system since the early 1970s, although its basics in some ways date back to Alan Blumlein’s work on stereo and Harry F. Olson’s development of directional microphones at the start of the 1930s.
Tarred with the same brush as the Quadraphonics debacle of the 1970s, it was kept alive by a small band of enthusiasts who realised the much greater capabilities inherent in the system. This continued to be the case until the advent of low cost digital technology towards the end of the 20th Century meant that it became, at last, accessible to many more people. In the past decade far more papers have been published on Ambisonics and Ambisonics-related subjects than in the whole of the preceding three decades. Does this mean it has finally triumphed?
Dave Malham has written VST plug-ins for Ambisonic processing, the ‘MRC Stereometer, a
K-system metering plug-in, and (with Matt Paradis) the ‘ambilib’ Ambisonic processing library for PD and Max/MSP. He also has a patent, WO02085068, for the Ambisonic Sound Object Format. Dave teaches digital audio, signal preservation, sound spatialisation and recording techniques on the Music Technology MA course at York.