this is dope! i would definitely enjoy some more informative tutorials on these advanced synthesis concepts and how they work! (not just showing us how to recreate them)
wow this is amazing, its like catching a glimpse of how it works under the hood. how did you figure out the theory behind this? also please do more of these synthesis videos. thank you so much!
They are all types of phase distortion. If you think of waveforms as arrays of amplitude values, normally you play through each sample/value in the waveform in equal amount of time, or linearly, at the speed set by the oscillator frequency. If you look at this lookup function as samples/time, it corresponds to a ramp up/sawtooth. But if you "bend" that linear function / sawtooth in different ways, which means spending more time in some parts of the waveform than in others you get phase distortion. One fun thing to do in phase modulation synthesizers that don't have built-in controls for phase distortion is to stop the "carrier" sawtooth by phase modulating with the reverse of the carrier saw at the same frequency, so that you get silence. But then you can start modulating the modulator again to get PD'ish effects.
@@Tsarpf Oh wow ok, that makes a lot of sense: From what you describe, I'm imagining the line of whatever waveform representing a series of connected dots that would play through steadily frame by frame while un-warped. With sample-position or frame at x-axis and time on y-axis, plotting this would result in a straight ramp up shape as you say. And if i'm understanding you correctly, these warp modes are different ways this curve is modified. That's an awesome explanation and thank you so much for taking the time to explain this to me. Clears up so much mystery. In the second half of your comment: do you mean having 2 identical waveforms exactly 180 degrees out of phase with one another to produce total cancellation and then playing with the phase position of one of them with an LFO or envelope? If so, ill definitely try that out some time. Again, thanks for your response!
Because you mention presets... how can groups be saved as presets? so I could drop the "Bend, Asym, Remap, Ring Mod, Sync, PWM, etc" modules in quickly
jeeez, how did you figure all that out?? genius
this is dope! i would definitely enjoy some more informative tutorials on these advanced synthesis concepts and how they work! (not just showing us how to recreate them)
wow this is amazing, its like catching a glimpse of how it works under the hood. how did you figure out the theory behind this?
also please do more of these synthesis videos. thank you so much!
They are all types of phase distortion. If you think of waveforms as arrays of amplitude values, normally you play through each sample/value in the waveform in equal amount of time, or linearly, at the speed set by the oscillator frequency. If you look at this lookup function as samples/time, it corresponds to a ramp up/sawtooth. But if you "bend" that linear function / sawtooth in different ways, which means spending more time in some parts of the waveform than in others you get phase distortion.
One fun thing to do in phase modulation synthesizers that don't have built-in controls for phase distortion is to stop the "carrier" sawtooth by phase modulating with the reverse of the carrier saw at the same frequency, so that you get silence. But then you can start modulating the modulator again to get PD'ish effects.
@@Tsarpf Oh wow ok, that makes a lot of sense:
From what you describe, I'm imagining the line of whatever waveform representing a series of connected dots that would play through steadily frame by frame while un-warped. With sample-position or frame at x-axis and time on y-axis, plotting this would result in a straight ramp up shape as you say. And if i'm understanding you correctly, these warp modes are different ways this curve is modified.
That's an awesome explanation and thank you so much for taking the time to explain this to me. Clears up so much mystery.
In the second half of your comment: do you mean having 2 identical waveforms exactly 180 degrees out of phase with one another to produce total cancellation and then playing with the phase position of one of them with an LFO or envelope? If so, ill definitely try that out some time.
Again, thanks for your response!
Amazing!
Thanks dude! I had unsuccessfully been trying to realize how to recreate all the Serum warps for a long time
Thank you man!
Incredibly helpful! thank you so much!
That's incredible. Thank you for sharing.
How did you figured this out?
Dope some techniques that i didn't know ! Thanks man !
You are goated! Thank you for this
this is incredible! thanks for the useful video :)
So cool!! Thx!
Because you mention presets... how can groups be saved as presets? so I could drop the "Bend, Asym, Remap, Ring Mod, Sync, PWM, etc" modules in quickly
epic
can also mod the level on the first method instead of macro to the macro
my lines come out as curved by default. how do i make straight lines?
Click on the point again: a circle will make curved lines, and a diamond will make straight lines.
Tf is a warp mode
google it
The different ways the current wave cycle can be messed with, which Serum, Massive, and Vital are able to do by default