Hello fellow courserians,
I''m Mircea Oculeanu, from Bucharest, Romania. This is the week 6 assignment for Coursera's Introduction to Music Production.
The subject of synthesis is so vast I couldn't dream of discussing it on a blog post - not even in a looong long series :) of blog posts. But, reviewing some of the subjects discussed this week at Coursera I decided it would be of great interest to see what are the differencies and the common things in synthesizers. So, let's start with a definition. As wikipedia puts it:
"A synthesizer uses electronic oscillators (or occasionally digital samples) to create an 'artificial' sound. Many have controls for mixing and modulating this to make unique timbres. Most have keyboards to control them, but rare examples such as the ondes martenot and trautonium use other systems.
Synthesisers can be used to emulate the sound of existing instruments or can be used to make completely new ones. They're very versatile. Modern synthesisers will often have additional sound processing modules such as attack and decay control, distortion or multiple oscillators.
Now, abou our synthesizers. The main difference between Loudon's educational synth and the one I've used is the complexity. But the basic principals are there in both of them
So, we've just heard a preset sound, and I wanted to show you the interface.
The basic structure is the same for both synthesizers: they both have oscillators, only this one - reaktor - has 3 oscillators that produce independantly the sounds! And better than that, you can mix those sounds.
What oscillators do? They're the source of any signal produced by the synthesizer.
Another thing that separates those to synths: the educational one emits just a note at a time - mono - and this one - Reaktor - emits many notes in the same time - polysinth.
Another difference between this two synthesizer is the complexity of the Filter section.
The filter section is placed between the oscillators and the effects; it sculpts the oscillators’ basic sounds - that can be harsh and very bright.
Several modulation sources are available: two ADSR envelope generators, a recordable envelope, and two LFOs combined with a key-scaler that provides four independent control points and four freely assignable MIDI controllers. There's no need to differentiate the two synthesizers here, the eductional one has one ADSR envelope generator, the Reaktor has two but it also have an additional posibilty, the recordable envelope.
The Reaktor has also an aditional block called Global, where the voice allocation of the synthesizer can be controlled, providing polyphonic and monophonic modes; by selecting the unison mode all available voices are set to the same pitch (as in a monophonic synth), but each one is slightly detuned. This results in waveform interference and a thick, chorus-like sound. Monophonic modes also provide portamento. Parameters determine the master pitch shift and MIDI pitchbend range, and adjust global tremolo and vibrato. Voices’ position within the stereo field can also be adjusted. These settings add enormously to the posibilities u can use with this synthesizer. The pallete of sounds is superb and we've only started with just one preset :).
I must admit I'l miss this weekly assignment and I'll miss learning for this course but....hope you've enjoyed it too and thank you for your time and understanding.....
.