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Table Of Contents
Appendix B Synthesizer Basics 493
Frequency modulation (FM) synthesis
FM synthesis uses a modulator oscillator and a sine wave carrier oscillator. The modulator
oscillator modulates the frequency of the carrier oscillator within the audio range, thus
producing new harmonics. These harmonics are known as sidebands.
FM
Modulator oscillator
Carrier oscillator
Resulting waveform
Typically, FM synthesizers don’t incorporate a lter. You can generate some subtractive
synthesizer style sounds with FM synthesis, but it is dicult to recreate the sound of a resonant
subtractive synthesizer lter using this method. FM synthesis is extremely good, however, at
creating sounds that are dicult to achieve with subtractive synthesizers—sounds such as bell
timbres, metallic tones, and the tine tones of electric pianos. Another strength of FM synthesis is
punchy bass and synthetic brass sounds.
The EFM1 and Retro Synth FM synthesizers can produce many of the classic FM sounds made
famous by Yamaha’s DX series of synthesizers. The DX7, sold from 1983 to 1986, remains the most
commercially successful professional-level hardware synthesizer ever made.
ES2 also features some FM techniques that allow you to modulate one oscillator with another.
You can use these FM techniques to partially bridge the gap between the digital sound of
FM synthesis and the fat analog sound that ES2 is noted for.