Substractive Synthesis
Substractive synthesis is the sound synthesis technique you find in most analog synths, and in their digital imitations. It is a very
intuitive technique for a sound designer because the synthesis
parameters produce direct, natural effects on the sound.
Description
The idea is to take an initial waveform and sculpt its spectrum with
filters. It is best to start with an oscillator like a sawtooth, a
pulse or any other waveform rich in harmonics, which you will modify with
the shape of the filter.
With a lopass filter, you remove the high
frequencies, emphasizing the basses, and
smoothing the waveform.
With a hipass filter, you remove the low
frequencies, emphasizing the highs, and making the
waveform harsher.
Filters' characteristics:
Since the filters have to be effective, filters with steep slopes
around the cut-off frequency work best. It is also nice to be able to
set the resonance of the filter, which is a region near the cutoff
where the frequencies are emphasized just before being suppressed: