Kromium wrote:Personally, I don't, but there is reasoning behind the "wobble" you get when you play sine notes together. It pretty much boils down to acoustics. The general idea is that when sine waves are played with each other the amplitude (wobbling) of the sound varies between the frequency of the two notes played together and the 2 sine waves play an average frequency made by the 2 notes.
Here's a diagram of what happens when you play 2 sine notes together.
NavyBrony wrote:You're pretty much describing what dissonance is.
I wouldn't necessarily call it a good technique for creating wubs though, as you would have 2 basses playing at their full level, with no cutoff.
In other words, you're muddying up the mix, because you're adding more to the same frequency spectrum, vs cutting frequencies off.
Captain Ironhelm wrote:If you fine detune two oscillators a very small amount, the pitch will sound the same, but the troughs and peaks meet together at different points. With the two sound waves combining, you'll get a pattern of pulsations in the sound. Adding another oscillator with yet another slight pitch difference can make the pulsation pattern even more complex. Also, off-setting when the sound waves start can help change the way the sounds match up together as well.
the4thImpulse wrote:I have used it before to create a 'rolling' sub bassline that would sit underneath a couple other synths that were all panning around and stuff. It has very limited practical uses so I would not recomend anyone use it.
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