Abstract

Directivity measurements for live performance of musical instruments present several experimental challenges, including the need for musicians to play consistently and reproducibly. Some researchers have chosen to implement fixed, limited-element microphone arrays surrounding instruments for rough directivity assessments. Unfortunately, with practical numbers of microphones and data acquisition channels, this approach limits spatial resolution and field decomposition bandwidth. Higher-resolution data may be obtained with a given microphone and channel count by rotating a musician in sequential azimuthal angle increments under a fixed semicircular microphone array. The musician plays a selected note sequence with each increment, but corrections must be made for playing variability. This paper explores the development of this method, which also uses rotating reference frame microphones and frequency response function measurements. The initial developments involve a loudspeaker, with known directivity, to simulate a live musician. It radiates both idealized signals and anechoic recordings of musical instruments with random variations in amplitude. The presentation will discuss how one can reconstruct correct source directivities from such signals and the importance of reference microphone placement when using frequency response functions. It will also introduce the concept of coherence maps as tools to establish directivity confidence.

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