Resonant Filter Sweeps Reborn
By
Peter Schwartz
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Resonant filter sweeps are as old as synthesis itself, and they
often tag a track as dated and synthy. Nevertheless, a good old-fashioned
eeeeowww is often just the thing to cut through the mud and grab
a listener's attention. Here are a few ways to add interest to that
time-honored sound.

FIG. 1: The purple and green peaks -indicate the
cutoff frequencies of two parallel lowpass filters at three
different times -during a downward filter sweep. |
Start
by selecting or creating a monaural patch on your favorite soft
synth with a typical downward resonant filter sweep (see
Web Clip 1). Insert the same synth and patch on a second track,
panning one track hard left and the other hard right. Next, set
up your MIDI routing to simultaneously play both patches. If the
sound is being generated from a synth with free-running oscillators
— meaning that the phase of the oscillator waveform is not
reset each time a note is triggered — the part may already
have a nicely animated stereo spread and a fuller overall sound.
The
animated stereo effect comes from differences in the phase of the
free-running oscillators. If you're using a single-oscillator synth
patch, you'll probably need to slightly offset the pitch of each
synth to avoid phase-cancellation effects. You can also avoid that
problem while achieving thicker textures and a more animated stereo
effect by using detuned two-oscillator patches.
Keeping Track
Although
this simple trick can be highly effective, it is often avoided because
it eats up two tracks. You can make the sound even more interesting
and perhaps justify burning that extra track by slightly offsetting
one synth's filter-cutoff frequency (see Fig. 1). That will increase
the stereo separation and add harmonic interest as the two synths'
filters sweep through different resonant harmonics (see
Web Clip 2).
Although
that effect may sound as though it's out of phase, it is perfectly
mono compatible. If worse comes to worst, you can retrieve the extra
track by bouncing to mono without losing the new timbral quality.
Bear in mind that a slight difference in the cutoff frequencies
produces a subtle timbral change that lends new character to the
sound, but too great a difference results in distinct, hard-panned
sounds rather than a cohesive stereo effect.
As
an alternative to using two mono tracks, you can often produce the
same effect with a single stereo synth patch. The Moog Voyager is
particularly well suited to that task. While the cutoff frequencies
of its parallel filters are adjusted with a single control, the
Voyager's Spacing control creates an offset between their cutoff
frequencies. Other synths are equally capable of creating these
effects, though some may require a little more work than others
to set up.
As
a variation on that theme, keep the filter cutoffs set identically
and vary the decay time of one filter's envelope, making it a little
faster or slower than the other (see
Web Clip 3).
Different Mothers
You
can create that effect with hardware synths that do not offer multiple
outputs by recording one pass of the sound. Play the recorded part
panned hard to one side while making your pitch, filter, and decay
adjustments to the live part, panned to the other side. Be sure
to use the same MIDI data for each part.
You
can even create the effect with a sampler playing back a sampled
filter sweep. The trick is to detune one of the samples; but take
care with the tuning, because too slight a tuning difference will
produce flanging when rendered in mono (see
Web Clips 4 and 5).
This article presented courtesy of Electronic Musician magazine.
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