6 research outputs found

    Hardward and algorithm architectures for real-time additive synthesis

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    Additive synthesis is a fundamental computer music synthesis paradigm tracing its origins to the work of Fourier and Helmholtz. Rudimentary implementation linearly combines harmonic sinusoids (or partials) to generate tones whose perceived timbral characteristics are a strong function of the partial amplitude spectrum. Having evolved over time, additive synthesis describes a collection of algorithms each characterised by the time-varying linear combination of basis components to generate temporal evolution of timbre. Basis components include exactly harmonic partials, inharmonic partials with time-varying frequency or non-sinusoidal waveforms each with distinct spectral characteristics. Additive synthesis of polyphonic musical instrument tones requires a large number of independently controlled partials incurring a large computational overhead whose investigation and reduction is a key motivator for this work. The thesis begins with a review of prevalent synthesis techniques setting additive synthesis in context and introducing the spectrum modelling paradigm which provides baseline spectral data to the additive synthesis process obtained from the analysis of natural sounds. We proceed to investigate recursive and phase accumulating digital sinusoidal oscillator algorithms, defining specific metrics to quantify relative performance. The concepts of phase accumulation, table lookup phase-amplitude mapping and interpolated fractional addressing are introduced and developed and shown to underpin an additive synthesis subclass - wavetable lookup synthesis (WLS). WLS performance is simulated against specific metrics and parameter conditions peculiar to computer music requirements. We conclude by presenting processing architectures which accelerate computational throughput of specific WLS operations and the sinusoidal additive synthesis model. In particular, we introduce and investigate the concept of phase domain processing and present several “pipeline friendly” arithmetic architectures using this technique which implement the additive synthesis of sinusoidal partials
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