top of page

06. LFO & envelopes

LFOs and envelopes are 2 control modules: they won't make sound by themselves but they are used to control other parameters, and they can do amazing things. They are very common and powerful modules, to the point that you can find them on almost every synthesizer, and you can even find several of each on a lot of them.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

Basically, LFOs and envelopes move parameters over time, which brings movement to your sound. And movement is the sound is a key aspect of an interesting sound design - well, apart if you really go for a static aesthetic, but you get what I mean.

So what do they do?
 
We saw the LFO briefly in a previous video. LFO means low frequency oscillator, so it is basically an oscillator, but as the name states, it oscillate very slowly, most of the time below the hearable spectrum. 

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

LFOs come with different parameters:
- The shape of the oscillation. That can be a sine, triangle, square, sawtooth, etc... Serum 's LFO even allows you to make your own shapes
- The rate, which defines the speed of the oscillation

You can then link that LFO to any parameter, and the LFO will move this parameter along with its oscillation. So you can achieve different effects with that.

You can link that to the amplitude (or the volume) of an oscillator to create a tremolo effect.
Then if you crank up the rate and the amplitude of the LFO, it begins to add harmonics to the sound, and you enter in the domain of AM synthesis.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

You could also link the LFO to the pitch of your oscillator to create a vibrato effect. 
If you crank up the rate and the amplitude of the LFO, it also adds other harmonics to the sound, and you enter the domain of FM synthesis. 

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

LFOs are also commonly used on a filter's cutoff. With a low pass filter for example, which will cut the higher frequencies, you could create some wobble effect, used a lot in dubstep. You can then automate the rate of the LFO to create rhythms.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

On Ableton's operator you can link the LFO to the amp or the pitch of any oscillator by clicking on the LFO section, then selecting what you want it to affect in the middle area

And in Serum you can find the LFO here. You can then drag and drop the LFO on any parameter you'd like it to affect.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

To create some movement in the sound, an LFO is also often used on the waveform or on the pulse width of the oscillator, so the source sound of the synth would change a little over time.

These are just a few examples to scratch the surface of what an LFO can do.
But remember you could use an LFO on pretty much any parameter of any module we've seen and will see in the future.
You can use an LFO synced to the tempo to use it rhythmically or use it with a slow rate to add just a little bit of motion.
Or when you crank up the rate of the LFO, you might discover new types of distortions. Just like when we modulate the pitch of an oscillator very fast to have FM, you could find interesting things if you modulate very fast a parameter of another effect
You could, for example, modulate a phaser very fast.

Try to use an LFO on many parameters, changing the wave shape, the rate and the amount to make different effects.

Some LFO also allows to use them in "1 shot" mode. In this mode, the LFO's shape will be read only once. Which turns the LFO into an envelope essentially.

Envelopes are also modules that won't make any sound on their own, their role is also to affect other parameters. 

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

To see exactly what it does, let's use an envelope linked to the volume of an oscillator. That's the most common way to use it. Then it's called an Amp envelope.

(In a modular setup, you want to bring the gate of your controller, or sequencer, to your envelope so it triggers it every time a new note is played. Then you can link this envelope to the amp of an oscillator, so it controls its volume. Here, on this module, you have 2 possible inputs: exponential and logarithmic. The exponential will have a more drastic effect on the sound than the logarithmic.)

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

Every synth would have a built-in envelope linked to the amp of the oscillator.

An envelope comes with 4 parameters: A, D, S and R, for attack, decay, sustain and release.
These refer to different stages of what happens when you press a key of you keyboard to play a sound.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

- The attack determines the time the note takes to reach full power from the moment the note is played. So with an attack at the minimum, at 0ms, the note appears at its full power. With a longer attack, the sound fades in.
- The decay is the time it takes between the attack and the sustain
- The sustain is the volume of the note when the key is held down. If the sustain is all the way up, the decay would have no effect, as it would make make a transition from full power to full power
- And the release is the time it take for the note to die off after the key is released. So the longer the release, the longer the fade out

So for example, if you want to make a more percussive sound, like a xylophone, you can put the sustain and the attack all the way down, so the length of the note will be controlled by the decay. And you can then have a longer release, in case you play a very short note, it will still resonate a little. 
(But if you want to mute the sound when you release a key, to avoid a muddy sound, you can then lower the release to taste.)

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

And if you want to make a pad sound, that would be softer, like a violin, you can have a longer attack with a longer release, and you can have the sustain all the way up, so you don't have to worry about the decay.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

(Or if you want to make a sound that reacts like a piano, you could have a very short attack, so the sound appears right away when you play a note. Then you can have a little bit of decay, so the sound would be a little percussive at the beginning. The sustain can be lowered a little bit, so be can hear the decay. And then you can have a short release, so the sound stops quickly when the key is released. Or you can make the release longer if you want to make it sound more like if we played the piano with the sustain pedal. )

As you can see, the envelope is pretty powerful to shape the sound as you want. I think this is one of the most important part of a sound design. But the envelope can control way more the the amplitude of an oscillator. 

It can also control the cutoff of a filter, which is also a very common thing to do. It is then called a filter envelope. When you see 2 envelopes on a hardware synth, most of the time, one is for the amp and the other is for the filter.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

A filter envelope should come with an amount or depth parameter, that allows you to control how much the envelope moves the cutoff frequency. This amount knob could go to positive as well as negative values, to move this cutoff frequency upward or downward.

You can find this knob here on this module, here in ableton after you clicked on the filter section, and here in Serum, the little icon next to the knob you assigned the envelope to.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

So when a note is triggered, the cutoff starts where it is set on the filter, then move up or down during the attack phase, by an amount set by the envelope 's amount. Then the cutoff will go back down or up, during the decay phase, to reach the sustain value. And when the note stops playing, the cutoff goes back to its original value, during the release phase.

You can then play with the resonance of the filter to hear more or less where the filter is cutting.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

For example we have a sawtooth wave that is filtered by a low pass filter, and we have a filter envelope. The envelope is set with a very short attack, a bit of decay, no sustain and a short release, so it makes a percussive sound.
With the amont knob, I can tell the filter envelope to bring the filter's cutoff upward by putting it on a positive value.
So here the cutoff will start quite low and will then be brought up by the envelope, and then go back down with the decay

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

There we created a plucky bass sound, that can go well with a kick to make like a trance track.

If I set this amount knob to a negative value, and turn up the filter cutoff, the filter sweep will then create a wah-wah 

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

If you want the wah-wah effect to open and close, you can make it the other way around, with a longer attack and a positive amount value for the envelope.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

And if you want the wah-wah to stay open when you play a note, you can crank up the sustain. Then the release will set the time the wah-wah takes to close after the note has stopped playing.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

When you have an amp envolope AND a filter envelope, make sure the amp envelope let enough sound through if you want to hear the filter envelope. 
You might not hear the filter envelope's decay if it's attack is too short for example.
So make sure you have an actual sound going through so you can filter it.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

An amp envelope and a filter envelope are super effective together to shape you sound. But you could use envelopes on any other parameters,  so don't hesitate to try it on the pulse width or on the wave table position for example.

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png

place_holder_1920x1080png.png
bottom of page