Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The name "flanging" comes from the original method of creation.
Flanging, by nature, has the effect of thinning down a signal, especially if used on an extreme setting.
At lower dosages, it has been reported to have an effect similar to a flanging, or a phase shift.
The anecdote explains one variation of how the term "flanging" came to be associated with this recording effect.
Also known as "infinite flanging", this sonic illusion is similar to the Shepard tone effect.
The flanging can extend up the bole.
Flanging, chorus and reverberation (reverb) are all delay-based sound effects.
As with several other dance genres at the time, the use of effects such as filters, phasing, and flanging was commonplace.
The outro begins at 1 minute 55 seconds, with lead guitar lines and heavy drums, featuring flanging, bringing the track to a climax.
"Are You Receiving" (1979) by Killing Joke, features heavy flanging before the final chorus.
The track begins with a drum fill, featuring flanging, before a harp, strings, acoustic guitar and bass join at 2 seconds.
According to Lewisohn, "The Beatles' influence was so vast that the term "flanging" is still in use today, more than 20 years on."
However, the rim displays the same flanging, and the neck is almost as wide as that of the cantharus in the mosaic of insula 34.
Rather than the time-consuming and costly flanging of flat plates, these curved plates could be pressed and riveted together almost immediately.
The album was produced by Martin, and presumably the connection with flanging comes from Monro's mimicking (double-tracking) Sinatra.
The first Beatles track to feature flanging was "Tomorrow Never Knows" from Revolver, which was recorded on April 6, 1966.
Instrumentation is sparse with a guitar, featuring flanging, playing several licks alongside bass and drums, which are heavily affected by flanging.
"Barberpole Flanger" are algorithms that offers simple Barberpole Flanging implementation, and is known also as "infinite flanging".
The patents were issued on February 25, 1879 and in the same year the House and Wheeler Hat Flanging Co., a joint stock company, was formed in Bridgeport.
An additional explanation for the pedigree of flanging has it named after Fred Flange, a pseudonym given to Matt Monro by Peter Sellers, who used a Monro recording to open his 1959 Sinatra parody album Songs for Swingin' Sellers.
While Shepard tones are created by generating a cascade of tones, fading in and out while sweeping the pitch either up or down, barber-pole flanging uses a cascade of multiple delay lines, fading each one in to the mix and fading it out as it sweeps to the delay time limit.
Third plateau: At 7.5 to 15.0 mg/kg, effects include flanging of visual effects, difficulty recognizing people or objects, chaotic blindness, dreamlike vision, inability to comprehend language, abstract hallucinations, delayed reaction time, decision making impairment, feelings of peace and quiet, near complete loss of motor coordination, short-term memory impairment, and/or feelings of rebirth.