Patents by Inventor Teruo Hiyoshi
Teruo Hiyoshi has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
-
Patent number: 5290964Abstract: A musical tone control apparatus controls a musical tone corresponding to a movement itself of an object and the like which is detected by a detector Such detector detects also a moving speed, a moving force, a moving angle or an intensity of given impulse of the object. In the case where the detector is mounted in the vicinity of a player's joint, the detector detects a revolving or bending angle of the player's joint. Hence, the musical tone can be controlled based on such angle of the player's joint. Thus, through this musical tone control apparatus, the player can generate a musical tone having, for example, a desirable tone pitch, a desirable volume and a desirable tone color based on the movement of the object or the player's joint.Type: GrantFiled: September 10, 1992Date of Patent: March 1, 1994Assignee: Yamaha CorporationInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Kinpara Mamoru, Suzuki Hideo, Akira Nakada, Eiichiro Aoki, Masao Sakama
-
Patent number: 5147969Abstract: The musical tone control apparatus detects a movement of a player, such as a holding, touching, beating, depressing, pulling, lifting up or down movement. Then, the musical tone control apparatus generates musical tone control data based on a detecting result of the movement of the player. The musical tone control data control a tone pitch, a tone color or a tone volume of a musical tone to be generated.Type: GrantFiled: May 1, 1991Date of Patent: September 15, 1992Assignee: Yamaha CorporationInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Hideo Suzuki, Mamoru Kinpara, Kunihiko Watanabe
-
Patent number: 5125313Abstract: The musical tone control apparatus detects a movement of a player, such as a holding, touching, beating, depressing, pulling, lifting up or down movement. Then, the musical tone control apparatus generates musical tone control data based on a detecting result of the movement of the player. The musical tone control data control a tone pitch, a tone color or a tone volume of a musical tone to be generated.Type: GrantFiled: May 29, 1990Date of Patent: June 30, 1992Assignee: Yamaha CorporationInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Hideo Suzuki, Mamoru Kinpara, Kunihiko Watanabe
-
Patent number: 5081896Abstract: The musical tone generating apparatus converts a movement of a man into a musical tone. Such movement of the man includes a walking or running movement, a jumping movement, a rubbing movement and a beating movement, a turning movement and the like. More specifically, a tone pitch, a tone color, a tone volume or other parameters of the musical tone to be generated is controlled based on a value of a moving speed, a value of a jumping height or a value of frictional heat produced by the rubbing movement of player's hands.Type: GrantFiled: March 7, 1990Date of Patent: January 21, 1992Assignee: Yamaha CorporationInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Hideo Suzuki, Eiichiro Aoki, Akira Nakada, Shinji Kumano, Kunihiko Watanabe, Masao Sakama
-
Patent number: 4461199Abstract: In a keyboard musical instrument employing waveform memory, a user may program the number and order of waveforms to be sequentially read out from a waveform memory containing a plurality of different waveforms.Type: GrantFiled: December 9, 1982Date of Patent: July 24, 1984Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Eisaku Okamoto, Eiichiro Aoki, Toshio Sugiura, Koichi Kozuki
-
Patent number: 4253367Abstract: A musical tone forming device comprises circuit system of digital calculation realizing frequency modulation technology in three different modes. In the first mode a plurality of frequency modulated waveforms are individually calculated in response to key depression and resultant data is added together to provide a musical tone signal, in the second mode, a signal waveform having a frequency corresponding to a depressed key is frequency-modulated with a plurality of signal waveforms, and in the third mode a signal waveform of a frequency corresponding to a depressed key is frequency-modulated in a multiple manner with a plurality of signal waveforms. Throughout these systems, the same component parts are commonly used and tone signals of the respective systems can be produced by a simple switching operation.Type: GrantFiled: October 3, 1979Date of Patent: March 3, 1981Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada
-
Patent number: 4186640Abstract: An electronic musical instrument comprises an automatic rhythm performance device, an automatic bass chord performance device and an automatic arpeggio performance device. Each device has its own start-stop control circuit and a control in/out terminal. When a device is start-stop controlled, a control signal appears at the control in/out terminal, whereas if a control signal is externally applied to the control in/out terminal, the device is start-stop controlled. The control in/out terminals of the respective devices are connected together by a common line so that a start-stop of one device causes the start-stop of other devices.Type: GrantFiled: February 13, 1978Date of Patent: February 5, 1980Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Yasuji Uchiyama, Eiichi Yamaga, Eiichiro Aoki
-
Patent number: 4185532Abstract: An envelope generator is provided with a count circuit the count value of which is varied through addition or subtraction or combination thereof, and a conversion circuit which operates to convert the count value into amplitude data, so as to generate an envelope having a shape corresponding to variations with time of the count value. According to one aspect of the invention, the count circuit is a circuit which carries out computation for exponentially varying the count value through polygonal line approximation, so as to form an envelope of exponential characteristic. According to another aspect of the invention, the conversion circuit is a memory which has stored amplitude data corresponding to count values in advance so as to convert count values in the last linear region of the envelope obtained by the polygonal line approximation into amplitude data in exponential relation and to convert count values contained in the remaining polygonal line regions into amplitude data in linear relation.Type: GrantFiled: September 28, 1977Date of Patent: January 29, 1980Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: 4184401Abstract: An electronic musical instrument comprises an upper keyboard channel, a lower keyboard channel and a pedal keyboard channel. The lower keyboard channel includes a tone gate which is actuated by a chord rhythm pattern pulse generated by an automatic rhythm generator to gate the lower keyboard tones. The pedal keyboard channel includes a root/subordinate tone generator which provide a root tone designated by the depressed pedal key and subordinate tones related to the root tone with predetermined musical intervals, and a tone keyer which is actuated by a bass rhythm pattern pulse generated by the automatic rhythm generator to gate the bass tones.Type: GrantFiled: August 17, 1977Date of Patent: January 22, 1980Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: 4179972Abstract: In an electronic musical instrument, the keys of a keyboard are divided into a plurality of groups by octaves, and a wave generator is provided with a memory for storing constants corresponding to musical tone frequencies to be generated according to the notes includes in a desired group out of the plurality of group, an accumulator for repeatedly adding the constants read out of the memory, and a bit position shifting circuit for shifting the bit position of the data produced by the accumulator according to the octave range of a note to be produced, thereby to obtain the data varying repeatedly according to the frequency of a note to be produced, and to reduce the storing capacity of the memory when compared to the number of keys.Type: GrantFiled: October 13, 1977Date of Patent: December 25, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Tsutomu Suzuki, Eiichiro Aoki, Takatoshi Okumura
-
Patent number: 4178826Abstract: An envelope generator comprises a counting circuit and counting control means capable of controlling a counting mode of the counting circuit, i.e., operation and non-operation of the counting circuit, counting speed, addition and subtraction etc., in accordance with an envelope shape to be obtained. There are various predetermined counting modes corresponding to different envelope shapes and the envelope generator includes selection means for causing the counting control means to select a desired one of the counting modes.Type: GrantFiled: October 6, 1977Date of Patent: December 18, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Tsutomu Suzuki, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: 4174650Abstract: An envelope generator for use in an electronic instrument generates an envelope waveshape control voltage having separate attack, first decay and second decay sections. The control voltage representing each waveshape section is derived from a separate voltage divider network. The divider networks are connected in series, with separate voltages supplied to the ends and junctions thereof. These supplied voltages correspond to the initial, attack, sustain and final voltage levels of the generated control voltage. The output nodes of the separate divider networks are accessed at different clock rates.A scanning circuit sequentially enables consecutive pairs of gates associated with each divided voltage output node. These gates alternately are connected to separate first and second output lines which provide divided voltages from adjacent gate pairs to opposite ends of an interpolation circuit. This circuit interpolates the provided voltages to derive the envelope waveshape control voltage.Type: GrantFiled: November 11, 1977Date of Patent: November 20, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Kiyoshi Ichikawa, Shigeki Ishii
-
Patent number: 4166405Abstract: An electronic musical instrument is of a type wherein musical tone waveforms are stored in a memory as their sampled amplitudes and sequentially and repetitively read out to constitute tone waveforms. A key depression brings forth key code in a digital representation. This key code is used for reading out frequency information from a frequency information memory. The frequency information is accumulated to make an address signal for reading out the waveform memory.When a key is depressed, a counter starts counting and opens a gate for a predetermined period of time. The gate passes a code representative of an interval of a grace note with respect to the note of the depressed key (i.e. principal note) to an addition and subtraction circuit for addition or subtraction between the key code and the code representative of the interval for the grace note. Accordingly, the key code is modified and the desired grace tone is produced.Type: GrantFiled: May 26, 1978Date of Patent: September 4, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Kiyoshi Ichikawa, Sigeki Isii
-
Patent number: 4158978Abstract: An electronic musical instrument capable of producing a performance effect resembling arpeggio. Tones corresponding to one or more depressed keys are sequentially produced from the lowest tone or the highest tone and an octave range in which tones are produced is shifted toward a higher octave or a lower octave at completion of each cycle of the tone production sequence. This shift of octave is continued to a certain predetermined octave and, after the tone production in the predetermined last octave has been completed, the tone production is repeated from the original octave or the tone production is conducted with the octave range being shifted in a reverse direction.For realizing simulation of arpeggio, plural key information produced by depressing a plurality of keys needs to be selected in a predetermined sequence. To this end, an up-down counter is employed in an example of the present invention.Type: GrantFiled: June 23, 1977Date of Patent: June 26, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: 4133244Abstract: An electronic musical instrument capable of producing an attack repeat effect. The attack repeat effect is a musical effect produced by repeated occurrences of attack and decay during a single continued sounding of a musical tone, giving to an audience an impression as if the tone started and stopped repeatedly. According to the invention, a complete envelope shape starting by an attack portion and ending by a decay portion is stored in a memory. When a key on the keyboard is depressed, the stored envelope shape is read from the memory and, upon completion of reading of one cycle of the envelope shape, reading of the envelope shape is resumed from the beginning. A time division multiplexed reading out of the envelope shape is conducted with respect to a plurality of channels. The read out envelope shape is used for controlling the amplitude of the musical tone signal. If the key is released, reading of the envelope shape is no longer repeated for a next and subsequent cycles.Type: GrantFiled: August 13, 1976Date of Patent: January 9, 1979Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Kiyoshi Ichikawa, Shigeki Ishii
-
Patent number: 4114497Abstract: An electronic musical instrument is of a type wherein musical tone waveforms are stored in a memory as their sampled amplitudes and sequentially and repetitively read out to constitute tone waveforms. A key depression brings forth key code in a digital representation. This key code is used for reading out frequency information from a frequency information memory. The frequency informaton is accumulated to make an address signal for reading out the waveform memory. The read out waveform is reproduced as a musical tone through a tone-color and volume control circuit. This tone-color and volume control circuit is controlled keyboard by keyboard.The key code produced upon depression of the key contains a signal representing the kind of the keyboard to which the depressed key belongs. This signal is applied to a conversion circuit and converted to a signal representative of a different kind of keyboard.Type: GrantFiled: September 29, 1976Date of Patent: September 19, 1978Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Kiyoshi Ichikawa, Sigeki Isii
-
Patent number: RE30736Abstract: In an electronic musical instrument, the keys of a keyboard are divided into a plurality of groups by octaves, and a wave generator is provided with a memory for storing constants corresponding to musical tone frequencies to be generated according to the notes includes in a desired group out of the plurality of group, an accumulator for repeatedly adding the constants read out of the memory, and a bit position shifting circuit for shifting the bit position of the data produced by the accumulator according to the octave range of a note to be produced, thereby to obtain the data varying repeatedly according to the frequency of a note to be produced, and to reduce the storing capacity of the memory when compared to the number of keys.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 1980Date of Patent: September 8, 1981Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Tsutomu Suzuki, Eiichiro Aoki, Takatoshi Okumura
-
Patent number: RE30906Abstract: An envelope generator comprises a counting circuit and counting control means capable of controlling a counting mode of the counting circuit, i.e., operation and non-operation of the counting circuit, counting speed, addition and subtraction etc., in accordance with an envelope shape to be obtained. There are various predetermined counting modes corresponding to different envelope shapes and the envelope generator includes selection means for causing the counting control means to select a desired one of the counting modes.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 1980Date of Patent: April 20, 1982Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Tsutomu Suzuki, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: RE32726Abstract: An envelope generator is provided with a count circuit the count value of which is varied through addition or subtraction or combination thereof, and a conversion circuit which operates to convert the count value into amplitude data, so as to generate an envelope having a shape corresponding to variations with time of the count value. According to one aspect of the invention, the count circuit is a circuit which carries out computation for exponentially varying the count value through polygonal line approximation, so as to form an envelope of exponential characteristic. According to another aspect of the invention, the conversion circuit is a memory which has stored amplitude data corresponding to count values in advance so as to convert count values in the last linear region of the envelope obtained by the polygonal line approximation into amplitude data in exponential relation and to convert count values contained in the remaining polygonal line regions into amplitude data in linear relation.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 1980Date of Patent: August 9, 1988Assignee: Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Akira Nakada, Shigeru Yamada, Eiichiro Aoki, Eiichi Yamaga
-
Patent number: RE34913Abstract: In a keyboard musical instrument employing waveform memory, a user may program the number and order of waveforms to be sequentially read out from a waveform memory containing a plurality of different waveforms.Type: GrantFiled: March 8, 1993Date of Patent: April 25, 1995Assignee: Yamaha CorporationInventors: Teruo Hiyoshi, Eisaku Okamoto, Eiichiro Aoki, Toshio Sugiura, Koichi Kozuki