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QSound

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
QSound
Product typeAudio processing
OwnerQSound Labs
MarketsWorldwide

QSound is the original name for a positional three-dimensional (3D) sound processing algorithm from QSound Labs that creates 3D audio effects from multiple monophonic sources and sums the outputs to two channels for presentation over regular stereo speakers. QSound was eventually re-dubbed "Q1" after the introduction of "Q2", a positional 3D algorithm for headphones. When multi-speaker surround system support was later added to the positional 3D process, the QSound positional 3D audio process became known simply as "Q3D". QSound was founded by Larry Ryckman (CEO), Danny Lowe and John Lees. Jimmy Iovine served as senior vice president of music and Shelly Yakus as vice president of audio engineering in its formative years.[1]

Technology

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QSound is essentially a filtering algorithm. It manipulates timing, amplitude, and frequency response to produce a binaural image. Systems like QSound rely on the fact that a sound arriving from one side of the listener will reach one ear before the other and that when it reaches the furthest ear, it is lower in amplitude and spectrally altered due to obstruction by the head. However, the ideal algorithm was arrived at empirically, with parameters adjusted according to the outcomes of many listening tests.[2]

3D positional processing like QSound, the multi-channel QSystem professional processor used in the production of pop music and film audio, is distinct from stereo expansion like QSound QXpander or SRS Sound Retrieval System. Positional 3D audio processing is a producer-side technology. It is applied to individual instruments or sound effects, and is therefore only usable at the mixing phase of music and soundtrack production, or under realtime control of game audio mixing software. Stereo expansion (processing of recorded channels and background ambience) is primarily a playback process that can be arbitrarily applied to stereo content in the end-user environment using analog integrated circuits or digital signal processing (DSP) routines.

Adoption

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The system was used in all Capcom CP System Dash, CP System II titles and the Sony ZN-1 and ZN-2 hardware arcade games such as Battle Arena Toshinden 2.

QSound was utilized on Madonna's 1990 album The Immaculate Collection, Sting's 1991 album The Soul Cages, Luther Vandross's 1991 album Power of Love, Paula Abdul's 1991 album Spellbound, and Roger Waters's 1992 album Amused To Death.

Electronic Arts, Activision, Microsoft Game Studios, Sega, Virgin Interactive, TDK Mediactive, Bullfrog Productions, and Lionhead Studios have also used the technology, mostly through the use of the QMixer software development kit to implement audio positioning, mixing and control directly in the game software. Later versions of QMixer added support for 3D-accelerated hardware through the low-level Microsoft DirectSound3D Application Programming Interface.

Sega first used the technology in 1993 for Sega CD games, beginning with the Sega CD version of Ecco the Dolphin. It continued the use of this system throughout the Sega Saturn and Dreamcast libraries.[3] Games for these consoles that used QSound typically used Red Book Audio CD music tracks with QSound mixing baked right into the audio files, as they lacked any hardware chips to achieve real-time control of QSound effects.[4]

While the system is known by some for its use in video game titles, the first QSound chip used for that purpose was not created until 1991, while QSound had been developed in the late 1980s and has been used in everything from screensavers to television programming. Some TVs were also produced with this technology.[5] Q3D has also been incorporated in a variety of computer sound cards and sound card drivers.

In 2003, Q3D was added to the list of components in QSound Labs' microQ, a small-footprint, performance-optimized software digital audio engine aimed at the mobile market (i.e. cellphones and the like). Q3D enables 3D sound for handheld gaming and can be controlled in Java games via the JSR-234 application programming interface.

QSound was also available for general home use in the UltraQ QPC 1500, a hardware device that used RCA connectors to connect to a variety of mono and stereo devices to produce surround-sound like effects.[6]

Awards

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QSound won Electronic Entertainment's 1993 "Most Promising" award; the editors called it the "hottest new audio technology around".[7]

Selected games using QSound

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(Most arcade games on this list run on the CPS-2 arcade system) Notable games include:

Selected albums "mixed in QSound"

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Over 60 albums feature QSound processing. Some notable examples include:

Selected films "mixed in QSound"

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ ABC News. "Entertainment News, Celebrity and Pop Culture - ABC News". ABC News. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  2. ^ White, Paul (November 1995). "QSound Labs: Right On Q". Sound on Sound (November 1995). Archived from the original on 2015-01-17. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  3. ^ "QSound". 30 January 2023.
  4. ^ "Q-Sound (Concept)".
  5. ^ "N.Mahalingam & Company - BPL Television". Archived from the original on August 26, 2010. Retrieved September 16, 2010.
  6. ^ http://www.qsound.com/library/ultraq-manual.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  7. ^ Staff (March 1994). "The First Electronic Entertainment Editors' Choice Awards". Electronic Entertainment. 1 (3): 61–65.
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