Despite the enormous complexity and range of sound creation and processing devices available to the music maker, soundwaves have only three properties which can be manipulated ...
Pitch / frequency
Timbre / waveshape
Amplitude
Sound has no other properties, it doesn't have colour or taste or smell etc.
Most devices for manipulating sound fall into one of 4 categories ...
Synthesisers, which create electrical (or digital) soundwaves
Samplers, which playback and process pre-recorded digital sounds
Effects processors, which add additional harmonics into a soundwave
Dynamic processors, which control a soundwaves amplitude over time
Synthesis
Learning analogue (subtractive) synthesis is often thought to be the best way to understand sound manipulation. All the controls for creating and editing patches (sounds) on a synthesiser manipulate one or more of the folowing 3 sound properties, often changing them dynamically over time.
1. Altering pitch / frequency
Here are some ways in which the pitch of a soundwave may be manipulated ...
A singer controlling pitch with the muscles in their larynx
A pianist playing different notes on a keyboard
A guitarist moving their fingers up and down a fretboard or bending a string
A brass player operating the valves on their instrument
A programmer setting the frequency of an oscillator
Time stretching in a digital wave editor
2. Altering timbre / waveshape
Every sound has a unique waveshape. This waveshape is derived from the combined energies of many individual harmonics, and determines the perceived character (timbre) of the sound. Here are some ways in which timbre may be altered ...
By combining 2 or more soundwaves together to create a phase relationship between them
By applying EQ to the soundwaves
By editing the frequencies and amplitudes of the individual signals ("harmonics") which combine together to build an electrical (or digital) pressure soundwave in an oscillator (see FM or additive synthesis)
By processing a soundwave with an aural exciter
3. Altering amplitude
Here are some ways in which the amplitude of the individual harmonics within a complex soundwave, or the overall amplitude of a complex soundwave, may be manipulated ...