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A multiband FFT extreme audio timestretch, inspired by PaulStretch.

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TimeStretch

Python3 version by Alex Ness and Jem Altieri

SuperCollider and Rust versions by Sam Pluta

Implements a phase randomized Real FFT time stretch algorithm, the NessStretch, which splits the original sound file into 9 discrete frequency bands, and uses a decreasing frame size to correspond to increasing frequency. Starting with a largest frame of 65536, the algorithm will use the following frequency band/frame size breakdown (assuming 44100 Hz input):

0-86 Hz : 65536 frames, 86-172 : 32768, 172-344 : 16384, 344-689 : 8192, 689-1378 : 4096, 1378-2756 : 2048, 2756-5512 : 1024, 5512-11025 : 512, 11025-22050 : 256.

The NessStretch is a refinement of Paul Nasca's excellent PaulStretch algorithm. PaulStretch uses a single frame size throughout the entire frequency range. The NessStretch's layered analysis bands are a better match for human frequency perception, and do a better job of resolving shorter, noisier high-frequency sounds (sibilance, snares, etc.).

See the ICMC paper for more details. Or just run it and give it a listen.

Installation

Rust

For an optimized version of the NessStretch, use the command-line Rust version, which can be installed in a couple of different ways:

  1. via homebrew (mac only), by running:
brew tap spluta/ness_stretch
brew install ness_stretch

then

ness_stretch -h

for the help.

  1. Rust cargo users can install with cargo:
cargo install ness_stretch

Linux and Windows builds (untested auto builds using GitHub actions) are found here:

https://github.com/spluta/ness_stretch/actions/runs/1087257841

Or download the Rust source and compile using cargo. The rust version will be very fast on Intel Macs and very slow on Arm machines (until rustfft gets updated).

Python

Requires numpy, scipy, and pandas. Using virtualenv:

virtualenv .env
. .env/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt

See the Readme inside the python directory for further instructions.

SuperCollider

The SuperCollider version can be installed by running:

Quarks.install("TimeStretch")

or downloading the source code and either 1) adding the source code directory to SC's path or placing the source code folder inside the Extensions folder (Platform.systemExtensionDir)

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A multiband FFT extreme audio timestretch, inspired by PaulStretch.

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  • Rust 43.2%
  • SuperCollider 39.9%
  • Python 16.9%