Wavetable synthesis: Difference between revisions

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<!--this article needs fixing-->'''Wavetable synthesis''' was first developed by [[Wolfgang Palm]] of [[Palm Products GmbH|PPG]] in the late 1970s <ref>[http://seib.synth.net/documents/w22omeng.pdf PPG Wave 2.2 owners manual]</ref><ref>[http://wolfgangpalm.com/ppg_blogs/c4/ Part 4 "Digital Age"] on Wolfgang Palm's blog</ref> and published in 1979.<ref name="Andresen">''A New Way in Sound Synthesis'' by Uwe Andresen, Audio Engineering Society (AES), 62nd AES Convention (Brussels, Belgium), 1979</ref>
 
==Wavetable synths==
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==External links==
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20010408055406/http://www.wavesynth.com/whatis.htm What is a wavetable?]<!-- change the article to use this as a reference instead -->
*[http://computermusicresource.com/Definitions/wavetable.synthesis.html Wavetable Synthesis]<!-- use as a reference instead -->
*''[http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/Jan03/articles/microwavetips.asp Waldorf Microwave Masterclass]'' by Richard Leon, SOS, January 2003
*[https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Sound_Synthesis_Theory/Oscillators_and_Wavetables#Wavetables Oscillators and Wavetables], Sound Synthesis Theory, Wikibooks
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