Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1141651> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 67 of
67
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1141651 subject Q8773241.
- Q1141651 abstract "In audio and music, frequency modulation synthesis (or FM synthesis) is a form of audio synthesis where the timbre of a simple waveform (such as a square, triangle, or sawtooth) is changed by modulating its frequency with a modulator frequency that is also in the audio range, resulting in a more complex waveform and a different-sounding tone that can also be described as "gritty" if it is a thick and dark timbre. The frequency of an oscillator is altered or distorted, "in accordance with the amplitude of a modulating signal." (Dodge & Jerse 1997, p. 115)FM synthesis can create both harmonic and inharmonic sounds. For synthesizing harmonic sounds, the modulating signal must have a harmonic relationship to the original carrier signal. As the amount of frequency modulation increases, the sound grows progressively more complex. Through the use of modulators with frequencies that are non-integer multiples of the carrier signal (i.e. non harmonic), atonal and tonal bell-like and percussive sounds can easily be created.FM synthesis using analog oscillators may result in pitch instability. However, FM synthesis can also be implemented digitally, the latter proving to be more 'reliable' and is currently seen as standard practice. Digital FM synthesis (using the more frequency-stable phase modulation variant) was the basis of several commercial musical instruments beginning as early as 1977. The Synclavier I, manufactured by New England Digital Corporation beginning in 1977, included a 32-voice digital FM synthesizer. Yamaha's groundbreaking DX7 brought FM to the forefront of synthesis in the mid-1980s.".
- Q1141651 thumbnail 2op_FM.svg?width=300.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink Chowning.pdf.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink fm.html.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink nph-Parser?patentnumber=4018121.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink about?id=GNEzAAAAEBAJ&dq=.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink fmtut.html.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink synthschool3.html.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink synthsecrets.htm.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink synth.htm.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=h3yrd2YvkUo.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink 2Mod.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=nZ-TetwzVcIC.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=nZ-TetwzVcIC&&pg=PA232.
- Q1141651 wikiPageExternalLink fmsynthesispaperfinal_1.pdf.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1062702.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1099044.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1148098.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1238976.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q135637.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q139300.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1418253.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q159190.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q16346.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1638169.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q163829.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q1663517.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q170475.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q176501.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q181417.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q188454.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q192822.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q211745.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q217338.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q219637.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q2641033.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3148866.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3193847.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3459425.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q353280.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q3571433.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q41506.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q4343.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q478382.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q495548.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5048910.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5057302.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5276177.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q5329.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q580758.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q638.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q6432221.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q652569.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q734687.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q7410130.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q749753.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q750463.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q7663920.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q796345.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8047690.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q834020.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8773241.
- Q1141651 wikiPageWikiLink Q9778.
- Q1141651 comment "In audio and music, frequency modulation synthesis (or FM synthesis) is a form of audio synthesis where the timbre of a simple waveform (such as a square, triangle, or sawtooth) is changed by modulating its frequency with a modulator frequency that is also in the audio range, resulting in a more complex waveform and a different-sounding tone that can also be described as "gritty" if it is a thick and dark timbre.".
- Q1141651 label "Frequency modulation synthesis".
- Q1141651 depiction 2op_FM.svg.