im finding too many ppl who dont know anything about sines, sawtooths, all dem simple waveforms. And i dont see a search function and havent encountered a topic explaining them yet, so yeah. heres a quick and simple intro just so you aspiring electronic artists arent completely clueless lol
the most common waveforms are these:
Sine
==sounds like this
Sawtooth
==sounds like this
Square
==sounds like this
Triangle
==sounds like this
im hoping that you know that sounds are vibrations in the air, and different shapes of the vibrations produce distinctive sounds, more and more complex ones forming the tight instruments you hear all over the AP and in all music. natural instruments are different since they usually dont follow these simple waveforms or simple transformations of them [i.e. adding them together, multiplying them, if you're in high school/college (or a really smart middleschooler) you would learn about that in pre-calculus.]
aaaand you should also know about the parts of a given sound produced by a synth, the ASDR Envelope: it consists of the attack, the decay, the sustain, and the release.
=Attack is when the instrument starts up and reaches peak sound levels.
=Decay is when it softens up a bit.
=Sustain is where the volume holds.
=Release is when the sound fades off.
changing the length/level of these sounds makes u sound much more controlled and tight, think about violinists. If they are feeling particularly intense, they can start off the sound loud, soften it up a bit and then hold the note for a while to feel spiritual and emotional, and then slowly fade away. yeah, learn it. its useful.