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Hello Panos,
Once again, I thank you for your replies and help. The reason for the long sample was based on the difficulty in finding click free loop points with the complex waveforms. (And, that brings me back to a question I posed a couple of times before but no one responded to it. How does GrandOrgue start the release without introducing pops or clicks? (For example: If the release starts at an amplitude in one channel of the stereo waveform at, say, 200 millivolts but the note key was released when the amplitude was at 800 millivolts you would hear a loud click unless GO does not start the release point marker position until the waveform approaches 200 millivolts to match the release amplitude. Then the other stereo channel must also match that channel release point also.)
Or, does GrandOrgue calculate the best point to start the release after you release a note? I had noticed that the release marker on several organ waves were set at the zero crossing point. So does this mean that GO looks for the zero crossing point in the played waveform when the note is released before starting the release?
I guess I don't understand the release algorithm that GO utilizes.
Best regards,
Stan
Once again, I thank you for your replies and help. The reason for the long sample was based on the difficulty in finding click free loop points with the complex waveforms. (And, that brings me back to a question I posed a couple of times before but no one responded to it. How does GrandOrgue start the release without introducing pops or clicks? (For example: If the release starts at an amplitude in one channel of the stereo waveform at, say, 200 millivolts but the note key was released when the amplitude was at 800 millivolts you would hear a loud click unless GO does not start the release point marker position until the waveform approaches 200 millivolts to match the release amplitude. Then the other stereo channel must also match that channel release point also.)
Or, does GrandOrgue calculate the best point to start the release after you release a note? I had noticed that the release marker on several organ waves were set at the zero crossing point. So does this mean that GO looks for the zero crossing point in the played waveform when the note is released before starting the release?
I guess I don't understand the release algorithm that GO utilizes.
Best regards,
Stan
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