Oscillators
What is an Oscillator?
An oscillator generates a repeating waveform – like a sine, square, triangle, or saw. It’s the core of most synth voices, producing raw audio that gets shaped, filtered, and modulated into music. You can think of it like a controlled vibration machine that makes electrical signals you can hear.
Different waveforms have different harmonic content. For example, a sine wave is pure and smooth, while a sawtooth is buzzy and full. Oscillators can also be modulated to create movement (like vibrato or FM) or combined to make more complex sounds.
Common Oscillator Types
- Analog VCO (Voltage Controlled Oscillator): Often warmer, classic-sounding.
- Digital Oscillator: Great for precise waveforms, wavetables, or weird stuff.
- Wavetable: Lets you scan through a set of waveforms.
- FM / Phase Mod: Advanced shapes with internal modulation. Technically, more than one oscillator is required to make these, as its a modulations between two sources.
Classic Waveforms
- Sine: Pure tone, no harmonics.
- Triangle: Soft and mellow, slight harmonic presence.
- Square: Hollow, rich in odd harmonics.
- Sawtooth: Bright, buzzy, full of harmonics.
Oscillators are where everything begins – but they’re also fun on their own. Sometimes just tuning two of them slightly apart and letting them beat against each other is a whole track waiting to happen.