Viola sound artifact on F4

• May 14, 2018 - 01:51

Minimal test enclosed.

There's no question but there's bogus sound artifact at the start of the final F. I think that I tried both soundfonts, but I didn't hear a difference (someone else please verify that for me). That's why my viola-intensive piece in C minor has clicks and pops in it. Actually, the opening E has the same glitch.

Attachment Size
viola_bad_note.mscz 4.78 KB

Comments

Can you describe what you are hearing in more detail? Perhaps upload an audio file somewhere? I don't notice anything unusual about the F or any other note in that passage.

In reply to by [DELETED] 1831606

I'm not saying it isn't worth trying to improve the consistency, but I'm still not hearing any actual audio clicks or pops, in fact I really don't even notice the effect there, even with headphones and listening carefully. Are you truly hearing actual clicks and pops? Can you upload that audio somewhere?

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

"Clicks and pops" was really the other thread (and, yes, I still experience considerably more violent artifacts on scores freshly-dowloaded from the site, irreproduceably). I hear drum-like accents on the notes of the F-E trill, but not the Eb-D trill. I'm sure I'm not making it up. It's on the audible sound of the MS link I posted.

In reply to by [DELETED] 1831606

You mean you hear that even in the playback from musescore.com? I don't, but to be sure I also downloaded it to my system, soled the viola track, and listened carefully through headphones at full speed and slowed down. Again, I certainly hear pronounced bowing, but it very clearly is a bow, not a drum, and certainly not a click or pop. Again, that doesn't mean it isn't worth improving, but if elsewhere you are experiencing actual audio artifacts, not just an unfortunate choice made by the person whose viola playing was sampled, that's definitely a totally unrelated matter as far as I can tell.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

Yes, I hear it in the playback on MuseScore.com; forget "clicks/pops", that's the other thread, a different problem (not really resolved yet). Having two notes in the sample bowed audibly differently than all others is not satisfactory for a soundfont. It is not an "audio artifact", but it is certainly a "soundfont artifact." The bad choice was made by the person who engineered and quality-assured the soundfont and perhaps directed the sampled musician. It was he or she who is responsible for the artifact, not the musician.
Yes, I didn't mean "drum" literally, but drum-like effect due to the anomalous bowing.

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