2009

Table Of Contents
Roland LA (Linear Arithmetic) synthesizers such as the D-50 work on a similar principle.
In these synthesizers, however, complex sampled attack phases are combined with simple
sustain or decay phases to create a sound. In essence, this is a simple wavetable that
consists of two samples.
Where LA and wavetable synthesizers differ is that the latter were designed to create
new, original, digital sounds. LA synthesizer designers, in contrast, wanted to emulate
real instruments using a minimum of memory. To facilitate this, they combined samples
of the attack phase—the crucial part of a sound—with appropriate decay and sustain
phases.
Vector synthesis—used in the Sequential Circuits Prophet-VS and Korgs
Wavestation—allows you to move through wavetables and sequences arranged on a
two-dimensional grid (two different vectors, or less technically, on the X or Y axis). The
main benefit of this approach is that the balance between samples and waves is achieved
in real time by moving a joystick. You can also use the ES2 to perform vector synthesis
by modulating the Oscillator Mix (Triangle) parameter with the Vector Envelope.
Additive Synthesis
Additive synthesis could be considered the reverse approach to subtractive synthesis.
See the beginning of this appendix, including the discussion about all sounds being a
sum of various sine tones and harmonics, for background information to provide insight
into additive synthesis.
In essence, you start out with nothing and then build up a sound by combining multiple
sine waves of differing levels and frequencies. As more sine waves are combined, they
begin to generate additional harmonics. In most additive synthesizers, each set of sine
waves is viewed and used much like an oscillator.
Depending on the sophistication of the additive synthesizer you are using, you will be
provided with individual envelope control over each sine wave, or you will be limited to
envelope control over groups of sine waves—one envelope per sound and its harmonics,
or all odd or all even harmonics, for example.
Logic Studio doesn’t offer a true additive synthesizer, but aspects of the additive synthesis
approach are used in the EVB3 and all other drawbar organs. In the EVB3, you start off
with a basic tone and add harmonics to it, to build up a richer sound. The level
relationships between the fundamental tone and each harmonic are determined by how
far you pull each drawbar out. Because there’s no envelope control over each harmonic,
however, the EVB3 is limited to organ emulations.
554 Appendix Synthesizer Basics