Future Music

BASS SYNTHESIS

Bass is a staple element of all kinds of music, from piano compositions to rock or jazz music. While the upper frequencies might be home to hooks and harmonies, it’s the lower frequencies that provide the foundations…

This is particularly true of electronic music, where the quality of a bassline can make or break a track. While there are many ways you can source your bass sounds, synthesis might be the most versatile approach (more on this shortly). Synth bass can come in a multitude of forms, though, from smooth analogue lines to harmonically complex digital patches.

As such, bass synthesis can be both one of the simplest and most complex processes in electronic music making. At the basic end of the spectrum, a solid sub can be made with little more than a simple sine or triangle oscillator, an amp envelope to control volume and a low-pass filter to shape the frequency. While this might be enough to provide a deep foundation under more complex sounds in your track, for a bassline that cuts through other elements and doesn’t get lost in a mix you’ll need to turn to techniques such as oscillator layering, modulation or distortion.

This issue, we’re focussing on bass synthesis in all its forms, guiding you through the basics to some more advanced concepts, ideas and mixing considerations. So, grab whatever hardware or plugin synth you have to hand, and let’s lay down some bass.

WHY SYNTHESIS?

As with all forms of sound creation, when it comes to making basslines, there’s more than one way to skin the proverbial cat. Traditionally, of course, the lower frequencies in a musical composition would be filled by an acoustic instrument specifically designed to work in that range, such as an upright bass or the lower registers of a piano – or in more recent times, an electric bass guitar. All of these remain viable options in the electronic realm, as does sampling. There’s no end of quality bass loops and one-shot hits available via the usual sample sources (including numerous available to download with this very magazine).

In the electronic music realm, however, synthesising your bass parts from scratch is undoubtedly the most flexible and versatile approach. The advent of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Future Music

Future Music1 min read
Hardware Grooveboxes
Full Review: FM405 | The K.O.II isn’t the most advanced sampler on the market by any stretch, but there’s a lot of fun to be had within its limitations. Full Review: FM405 The ‘Plus’ builds on the capabilities of the original Play by adding some neat
Future Music9 min read
Orbital Orbital
Funny, then, that it all begins with a ‘Chime’. Orbital’s legendary track was indeed the sound of something new being announced and ushered in – the arrival of the brothers Hartnoll, and a new age of dance music. Industry bods took note of the UK’s a
Future Music1 min read
Turn Guitar Riffs Into Ambient Soundscapes With NUSofting's Free Sosir Freeze-Delay
A new effects plugin from NUSofting promises to make sustained, bowed sounds from plucked, staccato ones by freezing and delaying the input signal – and it's available for free. This can turn a guitar riff into a shimmering ambient pad sound, but equ

Related Books & Audiobooks