The following is an example of subtractive synthesis as it might occur in an electronic instrument to emulate the sound of a
plucked string. It was created with a
personal computer program designed to emulate an analogue subtractive synthesizer.
Source Sound First, an
electronic oscillator produces a relatively complex
waveform with audible
overtones. Only one oscillator is necessary, and the number can vary widely. In this case, two oscillators are used:
Pulse-width modulation is applied to both waveforms to create a more complex tone with
vibrato: The pulse-width modulated sounds are now combined at equal volume. Combining them at different volumes would create different timbres. The result is a 2-second
source sound, which is ready for subtractive synthesis.
Subtractive Synthesis The combined wave is passed through a
voltage-controlled amplifier connected to an
envelope generator. The parameters of the sound's envelope (attack, decay, sustain and release) are manipulated to change its sound. In this case, the decay is vastly increased, sustain is reduced, and the release shortened. The resulting sound is audible for half as long as the source sound: With its new envelope, the sound is run through a
low-pass filter, which reduces the volume of higher overtones: To better emulate the sound of a plucked string, the filter's
cutoff frequency is raised. == See also ==