Synthesizer  

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"In actuality, the most inventive way to use a [[synthesizer]] is to [[misuse]] it. That's what we've done. That's what a lot of [[techno|techno music]]ians do now. The French call it [[deconstruction]]." --[[Irmin Schmidt]] quoted in ''[[Modulations: A History of Electronic Music]]'' (2000) "In actuality, the most inventive way to use a [[synthesizer]] is to [[misuse]] it. That's what we've done. That's what a lot of [[techno|techno music]]ians do now. The French call it [[deconstruction]]." --[[Irmin Schmidt]] quoted in ''[[Modulations: A History of Electronic Music]]'' (2000)
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-[...] In 1975, an edited version of "[[Autobahn (song) |Autobahn]]" was a top 10 hit. It wasn't the first synth hit --that honor belongs to Gershon Kingsley's hissing "[[Popcorn (instrumental)|Popcorn]]," performed by studio group Hot Butter-- but it wasn't a pure novelty either. --[[Jon Savage]]+"[...] In 1975, an edited version of "[[Autobahn (song) |Autobahn]]" was a top 10 hit. It wasn't the first synth hit --that honor belongs to Gershon Kingsley's hissing "[[Popcorn (instrumental)|Popcorn]]," performed by studio group Hot Butter-- but it wasn't a pure novelty either." --[[Jon Savage]]
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Revision as of 10:36, 5 November 2017

"In actuality, the most inventive way to use a synthesizer is to misuse it. That's what we've done. That's what a lot of techno musicians do now. The French call it deconstruction." --Irmin Schmidt quoted in Modulations: A History of Electronic Music (2000)


"[...] In 1975, an edited version of "Autobahn" was a top 10 hit. It wasn't the first synth hit --that honor belongs to Gershon Kingsley's hissing "Popcorn," performed by studio group Hot Butter-- but it wasn't a pure novelty either." --Jon Savage

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Synthesizer as used in music, is a term derived from a Greek word syntithetai < synthesis (συντίθεται < σύνθεσις) and is being used to describe a device capable of generating and/or manipulating electronic signals for use in music creation, recording and performance. A synthesizer is capable of generating and manipulating audio tones such as musical notes. Synthesizers can create electrical signals needed to drive and play audio amplifiers. The tone is generated by electrical circuits which may have adjustable parameters (as in analog synthesizers), and can perform mathematical manipulation of signal using a microprocessor and digital signal processing (as in digital synthesizers), or by a combination of both methods. Synthesized sounds may sometimes contrast with recordings of natural sounds , though sampling synthesizers significantly blur this distinction.

Music synthesizers sometimes include a keyboard, which makes them reminiscent of certain traditional musical instruments, like a piano or an organ. Various alternative or additional pitch controllers, such as "fingerboards" and "ribbons", have been employed as well. (See sound module.)

The term "speech synthesizer" is also used in electronic speech processing, often in connection with vocoders.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Synthesizer" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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