One thing that has interested me for a while is the different types of synthesis. It seems we can list the different types but that there is a fair amount of crossover between them. For example, is wavetable synthesis also subtractive synthesis seeing as it uses filters? And some FM algorithms are additive. Some forms of synthesis seem to have quintessential devices associated with them, like the DX7 or MiniMoog. But other forms, like granular or additive, maybe not.
It would interesting to have a conversation about how people categorize different types of synthesis and where the definitions break down or are inadequate for describing certain devices or software.
…there are the three basic concepts…subtractive, additive and fm…
while even fm is already a first hybrid combo…but also a basic common ground concept in the physics on the playground of all audible frequency design…
and all the rest use the same basic ideas in various/combos and pretty much countless variations of their very own kind and endless ways…
there’s no real difference if ur basic wave is nothing but a simple wave amplitude or plain white noise, that contains all audible frequencies at once, or a whole snippet of sampled content, containing heaps of various amplitudes…or the option to scan through various waves/amplitudes, or pick a single grain from that amplitude…
it’s all about stacking, reducing, blending and then carving or taming through various filtering and the overall chaining orders…
I like the “things known as FM” phrase, but I disagree on the conclusion that there are only those 3 types of synthesis
Phase Modulation is usually known as FM, and are similar enough (they both require pairs of oscilators as carrier/modulator), but Phase Distortion is a completely different technique, not similar to the other 3. Granular synthesis is also arguably different from the 3 groups you mentioned. Yeah, granular synthesizers usually step on the ground of the other techniques (they usually have filters and FM capabilities) but the source of the sound is completely different. Physical modeling is another one thats different from those groups. It involves a number of different variants, one of them being Karplus Strong synthesis (a technique that’s also very different from the others). West coast style synthesis could be grouped into the additive synthesis methods, but It’s also different from the traditional views on those. Traditional additive synthesis involves manipulating each partial of the resulting signal, but west coast synthesis requires waveshaping/wavefolding in order to create new partials, without that fine control over them.
Apart from those, I also believe the rest of them are little more than marketing catchphrases. For example, wavetable is not a new synthesis technique (it’s usually substractive or FM synthesis that starts with complex waveforms instead of simple ones).