It’s an interesting topic because the only issue I really have with digital sound sources is aliasing. Which isn’t an issue if the sample rate or oversampling are high enough, or mathmatic multiples to the fundamental frequencies of the note like the Modal 002, and maybe the PPG Wave.

Aliasing will sound bad if the foldback frequencies are not mathmatic multiples of the fundamental frequency. Then you get all this inharmonic garbage frequencies that sound generally awful. They can sound interesting and FM like since you are busying up the frequency spectrum but it depends on what note/frequency your playing and some notes will sound uglier because they are more obscure and inharmonic ratios to the particular note you could be playing. That’s because aliasing is always calculated at the Nyquist rate and stays constant in a fixed sample rate like 44.1 or 48khz, and is easily audible at least with notes in the higher registers or with alot of harmonic content since they are sending information up over the Nyquist frequency. It’s generally folded back in a frequency that is too high to be audible in high sampling rates like 96khz, which is as far as I’m concerned the one real benefit of working at a higher sample rate.

However, in the case of white noise, aliasing really shouldn’t matter. The frequency spectrum is already filled out completely, and nothing is really tonal, or has a fundamental frequency or harmonics of that frequency. It’s just all frequencies. So even if the white noise is aliasing you shouldn’t be able to hear it because those frequencies that would be aliasing artifacts in a less busy signal, are already present in the filled out white noise spectrum.

So it shouldn’t matter much. At least in the Rytm. The A4 has those C64 noise samples or whatever they are and they tend to be a bit more tonal but again, noisy so a bit more noise shouldn’t matter much.

Especially in white noise, noise is noise. :slight_smile: