Software Synthesizers - Soft Synths

Last Edited: Dec 25, 2023

What Are Soft Synths?

A software synthesizer, a soft synth, is a computer program or plugin that generates digital audio, usually for music. Computer software that can create sounds or music is not new. However, advances in processing speed are allowing soft synths to accomplish the same tasks that previously required dedicated hardware. Soft Synths are usually cheaper and more portable than dedicated hardware. In addition, they are easier to interface with other music software, such as music sequencers.

Advanced Algorithms

Software synthesizers usually have much more advanced algorithms than digital hardware synths. This is because the x86-64 CPUs that modern music production personal computers and Macintosh computers have been much faster (as well as support floating-point processing and greater than 24-bit Word size) than the Motorola 56000 DSP processors found in common Hardware Synthesizers like the Waldorf Blofeld Access Virus, Novation Ultranova, and Clavia Nord Leads.

Hardware Advantages

The advantage of dedicated hardware is that it can be more stable. Additionally, it often has a physical user interface (knobs and sliders) and is, therefore, easier to manipulate during performances. Many soft synths use mathematical algorithms that directly emulate the electronic components and circuitry of the original hardware synthesizer. This produces an exceptionally authentic sound. It even captures the "flaws" in the original hardware, such as oscillator drift caused by the thermal sensitivity of the components.

Synthesis Methods

Soft synths can cover a range of synthesis methods. This includes subtractive synthesis (and analog modeling, a subtype), FM synthesis (including the similar phase distortion synthesis), physical modeling synthesis, additive synthesis (including the related resynthesis), and sample-based synthesis. Many popular hardware synthesizers are no longer in production. Nevertheless, they have been emulated in software.

Software Emulations

The emulation can even extend to having graphics that model the exact placements of the original hardware controls. Some simulators can even import the original sound patches with accuracy that is nearly indistinguishable from the original synthesizer. Popular synthesizers such as the Minimoog, Yamaha DX7, Korg M1, Prophet-5, Oberheim OB-X, Roland Jupiter 8, ARP 2600, and dozens of other classics exist as software emulations.

Sample Usage

Some soft synths are heavily sample-based and frequently have more capability than hardware units since computers have fewer restrictions on memory than dedicated hardware synthesizers. A couple of these sample-based synthesizers come with sample libraries that are many gigabytes in size. Moreover, some are specifically designed to mimic real-world instruments such as pianos. Many sample libraries are available in a standard format like .wav, .sf, or .sf2 and can be used with almost any sampler-based soft synth.

Drawbacks

The major downside of using soft synths can often be more latency (delay between playing the note and hearing the corresponding sound). Decreasing latency requires increasing the demand on the computer's processor. When the soft synthesizer is running as a plugin for a host sequencer, both the soft synth and the sequencer are competing for processor time. Multi-processor computers can handle this better than single-processor computers. As the processor becomes overloaded, sonic artifacts such as "clicks" and "pops" can occur during performance or playback. The host sequencer or computer can lock up or crash when the processor becomes completely overloaded. Increasing buffer size helps but also increases latency. However, modern professional audio interfaces can frequently operate with extremely low latency, so in recent years, this has become much less of a problem than it was in the early days of computer music.

Source Text

Education

MASTER MUSIC PRODUCTION

Expert-led courses designed to take you from fundamentals to finished tracks.

An image of the House Boot Camp album art.

HOUSEFrom bouncy bass and solid kicks, this course teaches you the most modern House music production techniques needed to succeed and stand out.

An image of the Trap Boot Camp album art.

TRAPQuit sounding like generic Trap and produce something World with hints of the Far East. Create ethnic soundscapes to put your Trap ahead of the curve.

An image of the Ambient Boot Camp album art.

AMBIENTProduce relaxing, sophisticated psy-influenced ambient. Psychedelic and relaxing to listen to, create meditative soundscapes to put your listeners in Zen.