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Additive synthesis (now more often called ``sinusoidal modeling'') was
one of the first computer-music synthesis methods, and it has been a
mainstay ever since. In fact, it is extensively described in the
first article of the first issue of the Computer Music
Journal [186]. Some of the first high-quality synthetic
musical instrument tones using additive synthesis were developed in
the 1960s by Jean-Claude Risset at AT&T Bell Telephone
Laboratories [233,232].
Additive synthesis was historically implemented using a sum of
sinusoidal oscillators modulated by amplitude and frequency envelopes
over time [186], and later using an inverse FFT
[35,239] when the number of sinusoids is
large.
Figure G.5 shows an example from John Grey's 1975 Ph.D. thesis
(Psychology) illustrating the nature of partial amplitude envelopes
computed for purposes of later resynthesis.
Figure G.5:
John Grey 1975 -- CCRMA Tech. Reports 1 & 2 (CCRMA ``STANM''
reports -- available online)
![\includegraphics[width=0.8\twidth]{eps/grey-anal}](img2975.png) |
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