Additive synthesis most directly generates sound by adding the output of multiple sine wave generators. Alternative implementations may use pre-computed wavetables or the inverse fast Fourier transform.
Explanation
The sounds that are heard in everyday life are not characterized by a single frequency. Instead, they consist of a sum of pure sine frequencies, each one at a different amplitude. When humans hear these frequencies simultaneously, we can recognize the sound. This is true for both "non-musical" sounds (e.g. water splashing, leaves rustling, etc.) and for "musical sounds" (e.g. a piano note, a bird's tweet, etc.). This set of parameters (frequencies, their relative amplitudes, and how the relative amplitudes change over time) are encapsulated by the timbre of the sound. Fourier analysis is the technique that is used to determine these exact timbre parameters from an overall sound signal; conversely, the resulting set of frequencies and amplitudes is called the Fourier series of the original sound signal.
In the case of a musical note, the lowest frequency of its timbre is designated as the sound's fundamental frequency. For simplicity, we often say that the note is playing at that fundamental frequency (e.g. "middle C is 261.6 Hz"),[3] even though the sound of that note consists of many other frequencies as well. The set of the remaining frequencies is called the overtones (or the harmonics, if their frequencies are integer multiples of the fundamental frequency) of the sound.[4] In other words, the fundamental frequency alone is responsible for the pitch of the note, while the overtones define the timbre of the sound. The overtones of a piano playing middle C will be quite different from the overtones of a violin playing the same note; that's what allows us to differentiate the sounds of the two instruments. There are even subtle differences in timbre between different versions of the same instrument (for example, an upright piano vs. a grand piano).
Additive synthesis aims to exploit this property of sound in order to construct timbre from the ground up. By adding together pure frequencies (sine waves) of varying frequencies and amplitudes, we can precisely define the timbre of the sound that we want to create.
Harmonic additive synthesis is closely related to the concept of a Fourier series which is a way of expressing a periodic function as the sum of sinusoidal functions with frequencies equal to integer multiples of a common fundamental frequency. These sinusoids are called harmonics, overtones, or generally, partials. In general, a Fourier series contains an infinite number of sinusoidal components, with no upper limit to the frequency of the sinusoidal functions and includes a DC component (one with frequency of 0 Hz). Frequencies outside of the human audible range can be omitted in additive synthesis. As a result, only a finite number of sinusoidal terms with frequencies that lie within the audible range are modeled in additive synthesis.
Being inaudible, the DC component, , and all components with frequencies higher than some finite limit, , are omitted in the following expressions of additive synthesis.
Harmonic form
The simplest harmonic additive synthesis can be mathematically expressed as:
(1)
where is the synthesis output, , , and are the amplitude, frequency, and the phase offset, respectively, of the th harmonic partial of a total of harmonic partials, and is the fundamental frequency of the waveform and the frequency of the musical note.
Time-dependent amplitudes
Example of harmonic additive synthesis in which each harmonic has a time-dependent amplitude. The fundamental frequency is 440 Hz.
More generally, the amplitude of each harmonic can be prescribed as a function of time, , in which case the synthesis output is
.
(2)
Each envelope should vary slowly relative to the frequency spacing between adjacent sinusoids. The bandwidth of should be significantly less than .
Inharmonic form
Additive synthesis can also produce inharmonic sounds (which are aperiodic waveforms) in which the individual overtones need not have frequencies that are integer multiples of some common fundamental frequency.[5][6] While many conventional musical instruments have harmonic partials (e.g. an oboe), some have inharmonic partials (e.g. bells). Inharmonic additive synthesis can be described as
where is the constant frequency of th partial.
Example of inharmonic additive synthesis in which both the amplitude and frequency of each partial are time-dependent.
In the general case, the instantaneous frequency of a sinusoid is the derivative (with respect to time) of the argument of the sine or cosine function. If this frequency is represented in hertz, rather than in angular frequency form, then this derivative is divided by . This is the case whether the partial is harmonic or inharmonic and whether its frequency is constant or time-varying.
In the most general form, the frequency of each non-harmonic partial is a non-negative function of time, , yielding
(3)
Broader definitions
Additive synthesis more broadly may mean sound synthesis techniques that sum simple elements to create more complex timbres, even when the elements are not sine waves.[7][8] For example, F. Richard Moore listed additive synthesis as one of the "four basic categories" of sound synthesis alongside subtractive synthesis, nonlinear synthesis, and physical modeling.[8] In this broad sense, pipe organs, which also have pipes producing non-sinusoidal waveforms, can be considered as a variant form of additive synthesizers. Summation of principal components and Walsh functions have also been classified as additive synthesis.[9]
Implementation methods
Modern-day implementations of additive synthesis are mainly digital. (See section Discrete-time equations for the underlying discrete-time theory)
Oscillator bank synthesis
Additive synthesis can be implemented using a bank of sinusoidal oscillators, one for each partial.[1]
In the case of harmonic, quasi-periodic musical tones, wavetable synthesis can be as general as time-varying additive synthesis, but requires less computation during synthesis.[10][11] As a result, an efficient implementation of time-varying additive synthesis of harmonic tones can be accomplished by use of wavetable synthesis.
Group additive synthesis
Group additive synthesis[12][13][14] is a method to group partials into harmonic groups (having different fundamental frequencies) and synthesize each group separately with wavetable synthesis before mixing the results.
Inverse FFT synthesis
An inverse fast Fourier transform can be used to efficiently synthesize frequencies that evenly divide the transform period or "frame". By careful consideration of the DFT frequency-domain representation it is also possible to efficiently synthesize sinusoids of arbitrary frequencies using a series of overlapping frames and the inverse fast Fourier transform.[15]
Additive analysis/resynthesis
It is possible to analyze the frequency components of a recorded sound giving a "sum of sinusoids" representation. This representation can be re-synthesized using additive synthesis. One method of decomposing a sound into time varying sinusoidal partials is short-time Fourier transform (STFT)-based McAulay-Quatieri Analysis.[17][18]
By modifying the sum of sinusoids representation, timbral alterations can be made prior to resynthesis. For example, a harmonic sound could be restructured to sound inharmonic, and vice versa. Sound hybridisation or "morphing" has been implemented by additive resynthesis.[19]
Additive analysis/resynthesis has been employed in a number of techniques including Sinusoidal Modelling,[20]Spectral Modelling Synthesis (SMS),[19] and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model.[21] Software that implements additive analysis/resynthesis includes: SPEAR,[22] LEMUR, LORIS,[23] SMSTools,[24] ARSS.[25]
Products
Additive re-synthesis using timbre-frame concatenation:
Concatenation with crossfades (on Synclavier)
Concatenation with spectral envelope interpolation (on Vocaloid)
New England Digital Synclavier had a resynthesis feature where samples could be analyzed and converted into "timbre frames" which were part of its additive synthesis engine. Technos acxel, launched in 1987, utilized the additive analysis/resynthesis model, in an FFT implementation.
Also a vocal synthesizer, Vocaloid have been implemented on the basis of additive analysis/resynthesis: its spectral voice model called Excitation plus Resonances (EpR) model[26][27] is extended based on Spectral Modeling Synthesis (SMS),
and its diphoneconcatenative synthesis is processed using
spectral peak processing (SPP)[28] technique similar to modified phase-locked vocoder[29] (an improved phase vocoder for formant processing).[30] Using these techniques, spectral components (formants) consisting of purely harmonic partials can be appropriately transformed into desired form for sound modeling, and sequence of short samples (diphones or phonemes) constituting desired phrase, can be smoothly connected by interpolating matched partials and formant peaks, respectively, in the inserted transition region between different samples. (See also Dynamic timbres)
In linguistics research, harmonic additive synthesis was used in 1950s to play back modified and synthetic speech spectrograms.[31]
Later, in early 1980s, listening tests were carried out on synthetic speech stripped of acoustic cues to assess their significance. Time-varying formant frequencies and amplitudes derived by linear predictive coding were synthesized additively as pure tone whistles. This method is called sinewave synthesis.[32][33] Also the composite sinusoidal modeling (CSM)[34][35] used on a singing speech synthesis feature on Yamaha CX5M (1984), is known to use a similar approach which was independently developed during 1966–1979.[36][37] These methods are characterized by extraction and recomposition of a set of significant spectral peaks corresponding to the several resonance modes occurred in the oral cavity and nasal cavity, in a viewpoint of acoustics. This principle was also utilized on a physical modeling synthesis method, called modal synthesis.[38][39][40][41]
Harmonic analysis was discovered by Joseph Fourier,[42] who published an extensive treatise of his research in the context of heat transfer in 1822.[43] The theory found an early application in prediction of tides. Around 1876,[44] William Thomson (later ennobled as Lord Kelvin) constructed a mechanical tide predictor. It consisted of a harmonic analyzer and a harmonic synthesizer, as they were called already in the 19th century.[45][46] The analysis of tide measurements was done using James Thomson's integrating machine. The resulting Fourier coefficients were input into the synthesizer, which then used a system of cords and pulleys to generate and sum harmonic sinusoidal partials for prediction of future tides. In 1910, a similar machine was built for the analysis of periodic waveforms of sound.[47] The synthesizer drew a graph of the combination waveform, which was used chiefly for visual validation of the analysis.[47]
Georg Ohm applied Fourier's theory to sound in 1843. The line of work was greatly advanced by Hermann von Helmholtz, who published his eight years worth of research in 1863.[48] Helmholtz believed that the psychological perception of tone color is subject to learning, while hearing in the sensory sense is purely physiological.[49] He supported the idea that perception of sound derives from signals from nerve cells of the basilar membrane and that the elastic appendages of these cells are sympathetically vibrated by pure sinusoidal tones of appropriate frequencies.[47] Helmholtz agreed with the finding of Ernst Chladni from 1787 that certain sound sources have inharmonic vibration modes.[49]
In Helmholtz's time, electronic amplification was unavailable. For synthesis of tones with harmonic partials, Helmholtz built an electrically excited array of tuning forks and acoustic resonance chambers that allowed adjustment of the amplitudes of the partials.[50] Built at least as early as in 1862,[50] these were in turn refined by Rudolph Koenig, who demonstrated his own setup in 1872.[50] For harmonic synthesis, Koenig also built a large apparatus based on his wave siren. It was pneumatic and utilized cut-out tonewheels, and was criticized for low purity of its partial tones.[44] Also tibia pipes of pipe organs have nearly sinusoidal waveforms and can be combined in the manner of additive synthesis.[44]
In 1938, with significant new supporting evidence,[51] it was reported on the pages of Popular Science Monthly that the human vocal cords function like a fire siren to produce a harmonic-rich tone, which is then filtered by the vocal tract to produce different vowel tones.[52] By the time, the additive Hammond organ was already on market. Most early electronic organ makers thought it too expensive to manufacture the plurality of oscillators required by additive organs, and began instead to build subtractive ones.[53] In a 1940 Institute of Radio Engineers meeting, the head field engineer of Hammond elaborated on the company's new Novachord as having a "subtractive system" in contrast to the original Hammond organ in which "the final tones were built up by combining sound waves".[54] Alan Douglas used the qualifiers additive and subtractive to describe different types of electronic organs in a 1948 paper presented to the Royal Musical Association.[55] The contemporary wording additive synthesis and subtractive synthesis can be found in his 1957 book The electrical production of music, in which he categorically lists three methods of forming of musical tone-colours, in sections titled Additive synthesis, Subtractive synthesis, and Other forms of combinations.[56]
The first polyphonic, touch-sensitive music synthesizer.[59] Implemented sinuosoidal additive synthesis using tonewheels and alternators. Invented by Thaddeus Cahill.
An electronic additive synthesizer that was commercially more successful than Telharmonium.[59] Implemented sinusoidal additive synthesis using tonewheels and magnetic pickups. Invented by Laurens Hammond.
A speech synthesis system that controlled amplitudes of harmonic partials by a spectrogram that was either hand-drawn or an analysis result. The partials were generated by a multi-track optical tonewheel.[31]
An additive synthesizer[62] that played microtonal spectrogram-like scores using multiple multi-track optical tonewheels. Invented by Evgeny Murzin. A similar instrument that utilized electronic oscillators, the Oscillator Bank, and its input device Spectrogram were realized by Hugh Le Caine in 1959.[63][64]
An off-line system for digital spectral analysis and resynthesis of the attack and steady-state portions of musical instrument timbres by David Luce.[65]
The first synthesizer product that implemented additive[70] synthesis using digital oscillators.[68][69] The synthesizer also had a time-varying analog filter.[68] RMI was a subsidiary of Allen Organ Company, which had released the first commercial digital church organ, the Allen Computer Organ, in 1971, using digital technology developed by North American Rockwell.[71]
A bank of digital oscillators with arbitrary waveforms, individual frequency and amplitude controls,[73] intended for use in analysis-resynthesis with the digital Analysing Filter Bank (AFB) also constructed at EMS.[72][73] Also known as: DOB.
A commercial digital synthesizer workstation capable of polyphonic, digital additive synthesis of up to 128 sinusodial waves, as well as combing PCM waves.[82]
Discrete-time equations
In digital implementations of additive synthesis, discrete-time equations are used in place of the continuous-time synthesis equations. A notational convention for discrete-time signals uses brackets i.e. and the argument can only be integer values. If the continuous-time synthesis output is expected to be sufficiently bandlimited; below half the sampling rate or , it suffices to directly sample the continuous-time expression to get the discrete synthesis equation. The continuous synthesis output can later be reconstructed from the samples using a digital-to-analog converter. The sampling period is .
^ ab
Julius O. Smith III. "Additive Synthesis (Early Sinusoidal Modeling)". Retrieved 14 January 2012. The term "additive synthesis" refers to sound being formed by adding together many sinusoidal components
^ ab
Rodet, X.; Depalle, P. (1992). "Spectral Envelopes and Inverse FFT Synthesis". Proceedings of the 93rd Audio Engineering Society Convention. CiteSeerX10.1.1.43.4818.
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McAulay, R. J.; Quatieri, T. F. (August 1986). "Speech analysis/synthesis based on a sinusoidal representation". IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. 34 (4): 744–754. doi:10.1109/TASSP.1986.1164910.
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Fitz, Kelly (1999). The Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Method of Additive Synthesis (PhD thesis). Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. CiteSeerX10.1.1.10.1130.
^Sagayama, S.[in Japanese]; Itakura, F. (1979), 複合正弦波による音声合成 [Speech Synthesis by Composite Sinusoidal Wave], Speech Committee of Acoustical Society of Japan (published October 1979), S79-39
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Sagayama, S.; Itakura, F. (October 1979). 複合正弦波による簡易な音声合成法 [Simple Speech Synthesis method by Composite Sinusoidal Wave]. Proceedings of Acoustical Society of Japan, Autumn Meeting. Vol. 3-2-3. pp. 557–558.
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Sagayama, S.; Itakura, F. (1986). "Duality theory of composite sinusoidal modeling and linear prediction". ICASSP '86. IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. Vol. 11. Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, IEEE International Conference on ICASSP '86. (published April 1986). pp. 1261–1264. doi:10.1109/ICASSP.1986.1168815. S2CID122814777.
^Itakura, F. (2004). "Linear Statistical Modeling of Speech and its Applications -- Over 36-year history of LPC --"(PDF). Proceedings of the 18th International Congress on Acoustics (ICA 2004), We3.D, Kyoto, Japan, Apr. 2004. 3 (published April 2004): III–2077–2082. 6. Composite Sinusoidal Modeling(CSM) In 1975, Itakura proposed the line spectrum representation (LSR) concept and its algorithm to obtain a set of parameters for new speech spectrum representation. Independently from this, Sagayama developed a composite sinusoidal modeling (CSM) concept which is equivalent to LSR but give a quite different formulation, solving algorithm and synthesis scheme. Sagayama clarified the duality of LPC and CSM and provided the unified view covering LPC, PARCOR, LSR, LSP and CSM, CSM is not only a new concept of speech spectrum analysis but also a key idea to understand the linear prediction from a unified point of view. ...
^
Bilbao, Stefan (October 2009), "Modal Synthesis", Numerical Sound Synthesis: Finite Difference Schemes and Simulation in Musical Acoustics, Chichester, UK: John Wiley and Sons, ISBN978-0-470-51046-9, A different approach, with a long history of use in physical modeling sound synthesis, is based on a frequency-domain, or modal description of vibration of objects of potentially complex geometry. Modal synthesis [1,148], as it is called, is appealing, in that the complex dynamic behaviour of a vibrating object may be decomposed into contributions from a set of modes (the spatial forms of which are eigenfunctions of the particular problem at hand, and are dependent on boundary conditions), each of which oscillates at a single complex frequency. ... (See also companion page)
^
Doel, Kees van den; Pai, Dinesh K. (2003). Greenebaum, K. (ed.). "Modal Synthesis For Vibrating Object"(PDF). Audio Anecdotes. Natick, MA: AK Peter. When a solid object is struck, scraped, or engages in other external interactions, the forces at the contact point causes deformations to propagate through the body, causing its outer surfaces to vibrate and emit sound waves. ... A good physically motivated synthesis model for objects like this is modal synthesis ... where a vibrating object is modeled by a bank of damped harmonic oscillators which are excited by an external stimulus.
^The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 49. Taylor & Francis: 490. 1875. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[failed verification]
^ abLuce, David Alan (1963). Physical correlates of nonpercussive musical instrument tones (Thesis thesis). Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A.: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. hdl:1721.1/27450.
^ abCosimi, Enrico (20 May 2009). "EMS Story - Prima Parte" [EMS Story - Part One]. Audio Accordo.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 22 May 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2012.