A synthesizer envelope is like a timer that controls how sounds grow and fade, just like when you turn on a light or blow out birthday candles.
Imagine you have a toy that makes a boop sound every time you press it. Now, imagine if the boop got louder as you pressed it, then slowly faded away, like when your friend walks into a room and whispers something in your ear. That’s what a synthesizer envelope does: it tells the sound how to start, how loud it gets, and how it ends.
How It Works
Think of the envelope as having four parts:
- Attack: How quickly the sound starts, like when you jump on a trampoline.
- Decay: How the sound settles down after starting, like when you sit still on the trampoline.
- Sustain: How loud the sound stays while it’s playing, like chatting with your friend on the trampoline.
- Release: How the sound fades out when you let go, like when you jump off the trampoline.
These four parts work together to make sounds feel natural or wild, just like how you play with toys every day!
Examples
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See also
- How Music Got Loud (The Loudness Wars Explained)?
- How Does The Loudness War Work?
- How Does Dry/Wet Explained - Audio Basics Work?
- What is Original sound?
- What are digital audio workstations?