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Additive synthesis: spectral envelope control

The next patch example, D08.table.spectrum.pd (Figure 4.18), shows a very different application of additive synthesis from the previous one. Here the sinusoids are managed by the spectrum-partial abstraction shown in Figure 4.19. Each partial computes its own frequency as in the previous patch. Each partial also computes its own amplitude periodically (when triggered by the r poll-table object), using a tabread4 object. The contents of the table (which has a nominal range of 50 dB) are converted to linear units and used as an amplitude control in the usual way.

A similar example, D09.shepard.tone.pd (not pictured), makes a Shepard tone using the same technique. Here the frequencies of the sinusoids sweep over a fixed range, finally jumping from the end back to the beginning and repeating. The spectral envelope is arranged to have a peak at the middle of the pitch range and drop off to inaudibility at the edges of the range so that we hear only the continuous sweeping and not the jumping. The result is a famous auditory conundrum, an indefinitely ascending or descending tone.

Figure 4.18: Additive synthesis for a specified spectral envelope, drawn in a table.
\begin{figure}\psfig{file=figs/fig04.18.ps}\end{figure}

Figure 4.19: The spectrum-partial abstraction used in Figure 4.18.
\begin{figure}\psfig{file=figs/fig04.19.ps}\end{figure}

The technique of synthesizing to a specified spectral envelope can be generalized in many ways: the envelope may be made to vary in time either as a result of a live analysis of another signal, or by calculating from a set of compositional rules, or by cross-fading between a collection of pre-designed spectral envelopes, or by frequency-warping the envelopes, to name a few possibilities.


next up previous contents index
Next: Polyphonic synthesis: sampler Up: Examples Previous: Additive synthesis: Risset's bell   Contents   Index
Miller Puckette 2006-09-24