One of the earliest sound synthesis methods (specifically for voice) was the vocoder (``voice coder'') [118,117,460]. The vocoder was essentially an electronic ``buzz source'' shaped by a bandpass filter bank (implemented using analog electronic circuits). It is therefore an example of what is called subtractive synthesis in computer music. Since the vocoder was an analog system (at least for the first two decades or so of its use [138]), modern digital phase vocoders may be considered virtual analog systems.
However, the term ``virtual analog'' appears to have originated in the 1990s when digital synthesizers appeared that were designed to simulate earlier analog synthesizers, particularly Moog synthesizers. The first virtual analog synthesizers included the