Frequency modulation. -­ basics – Tiptop Z3000 Smzrt VCO MKII User Manual

Page 13

Advertising
background image

Frequency Modulation. -­ Basics

Frequency modulation (FM) synthesis is a technique

used to generate musically interesting sounds by

rapidly changing the basic frequency of a sound. The

pattern of change is created by another waveform with

a frequency within the range of human hearing.

In practice, it is as simple as connecting the audio

output of an oscillator to the frequency control input

of another oscillator. First, a number of considerations

need to be taken into account: waveform type, FM

input type, frequency ratio, and synchronization.

Frequency modulation starts with two or more

oscillators. The first (the modulator) is used to

modulate the frequency of a second oscillator (the

carrier). Typically, sine waves are used because they

are, ideally, free of harmonics, but modular systems

allow for the use of other waveforms.

However, the

more complex the modulating waveform is the more

complex the resulting waveform. Too much complexity

and the waveform becomes noise and avoiding this is

one of the most significant aspects of FM theory.

There are many books that can explain the

fundamentals of FM synthesis in greater detail than

is possible here. Frequency modulation has been widely

used in digital synthesizers thanks to the stability and

precise tracking of software-based digital VCOs. The

Z3000mkII’s built-in arithmetic processor allows the user

to implement true FM in analog, and to build

harmonically rich sounds using a calculated synthesis

approach.

(Continued...)

Advertising