Distortion synthesis


Distortion synthesis is a group of sound synthesis techniques which modify existing sounds to produce more complex sounds, usually by using non-linear circuits or mathematics.
While some synthesis methods achieve sonic complexity by using many oscillators, distortion methods create a frequency spectrum which has many more components than oscillators.
Some distortion techniques are: FM synthesis, waveshaping synthesis, and discrete summation formulas.

FM synthesis

distorts the carrier frequency of an oscillator by modulating it with another signal. The distortion can be controlled by means of a modulation index.
The method known as phase distortion synthesis is similar to FM.

Waveshaping synthesis

synthesis changes an original waveform by responding to its amplitude in a non-linear fashion. It can generate a bandwidth-limited spectrum, and can be continuously controlled with an index.
The clipping caused by overdriving an audio amplifier is a simple example of this method, changing a sine wave into a square-like wave.

Discrete summation formulas

DSF synthesis refers to algorithmic synthesis methods which use mathematical formulas to sum, or add together, many numbers to achieve a desired wave shape. This powerful method allows, for example, synthesizing a 3-formant voice in a manner similar to FM voice synthesis. DSF allows the synthesis of harmonic and inharmonic, band-limited or unlimited spectra, and can be controlled by an index. As Roads points out, by reducing digital synthesis of complex spectra to a few parameters, DSF can be much more economical.

Notable users

was one notable pioneer in the adoption of distortion methods.