enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. VRChat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VRChat

    The platform has attracted various music-oriented communities and events; dancers have leveraged full-body tracking support to give virtual performances and classes within VRChat, including ballet, breaking, and pole dance. [43] Online dance music events have also occurred on VRChat, especially since the COVID-19

  3. Virtual concert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_concert

    On the social platform VRChat, a number of groups have organized digital nightclubs and music festivals with live streamed DJ performances by users and producers, hosted in specially-designed worlds on the platform that mimic real-life venues. [20] [21] [22] Many virtual performances have begun experimenting with virtual and augmented reality ...

  4. Open Sound Control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Sound_Control

    The Open Sound World (OSW) music programming language is designed around OSC messaging. [7] OSC is the heart of the DSSI plugin API, an evolution of the LADSPA API, in order to make the eventual GUI interact with the core of the plugin via messaging the plugin host. LADSPA and DSSI are APIs dedicated to audio effects and synthesizers.

  5. Audio headset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_headset

    For music-playing mobile phones, manufacturers may bundle stereo earphones with a microphone. There are also third-party brands which may provide better sound quality or wireless connectivity. Mobile headsets come in a range of wearing-styles, including behind-the-neck, over-the-head, over-the-ear, and lightweight earbuds.

  6. Audio feedback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_feedback

    Block diagram of the signal-flow for a common feedback loop [1]: 118 . Audio feedback (also known as acoustic feedback, simply as feedback) is a positive feedback situation that may occur when an acoustic path exists between an audio output (for example, a loudspeaker) and its audio input (for example, a microphone or guitar pickup).

  7. Spill (audio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spill_(audio)

    Spill occurs when sound is detected by a microphone not intended to pick it up (for example, the vocals being detected by the microphone for the guitar). [3] Spill is often undesirable in popular music recording, [4] as the combined signals during the mix process can cause phase cancellation and may cause difficulty in processing individual tracks. [2]

  8. Video game music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_music

    Many video game players believe that music can enhance game play and outlets such as Popular Science have stated that it is designed to "simultaneously stimulate your senses and blend into the background of your brain, because that's the point of the soundtrack. It has to engage you, the player, in a task without distracting from it.

  9. Overhead microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overhead_microphone

    Overhead microphones are those used in sound recording and live sound reproduction to pick up ambient sounds, transients and the overall blend of instruments. [1] They are used in drum recording to achieve a stereo image of the full drum kit, [2] as well as orchestral recording to create a balanced stereo recording of full orchestras.