Ralf Mardorf wrote: > e.g. for a syncopic feeling human touch jitter always has negative delay,
I think I'm not wrong with this, but ... > when playing a funeral march it always has positive > ... I guess I was mistaken with this. Human touch seems to be more complicated. IMO humans, resp. good musicians will never do positive delayed jitter. Exaggerated we tend to play funeral march feeling like parts, that should be e.g. 110BPM instead at 109BPM, but the jitter might always be negative delayed. I think positive delayed jitter only will be made by machines and people with less good timing. I didn't test this, so I'm not sure, but I won't believe that we will tend to delay notes and rests. For music that is played by beats, I guess human touch jitter must be negative delayed. Imagine someone singing, when he can't hear his realtime voice, only a delayed voice. He will become slower and slower, because he tend to adjust the latency. It won't be a help a machine with positive and negative jitter after recording to give added delay, because there might be something else for music that is played by beats. The feeling of the bar. People from an African culture that are used to do 5/4 bars will have another kind of human touch jitter, than European people doing the same songs, with a more 2/4 + 3/4 bar feeling. Computer jitter is without those effects, it's not musical. It's speculative, but it's not speculative that computer jitter is different to human touch. Cheers, Ralf
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