well if i understand it correctly, make noise DPO is more or less similar to the buchla 259, two of which (plus VCA matrix) perform the study linked above.
so they both are tricore with waveshaping, and have hard sync between carrier and mod oscs.
259 additionally has a sort of analog “soft sync” where instead of resetting the mod osc phase on the carrier sawtooth, it reverses its direction.
i think these sync mechanisms are important if you want very “stable” FM sounds.
and i think you can get these metallic timbres in analog that are relatively stable, but with that extra organic drift. and there is a wider harmonic palette because, really, it is easy to push dx- and tg- series into heavy aliasing, and its become part of “that sound.” bandlimited FM is just not an easy thing to do even on todays digital hardware; all you can do is constrain the modulation as a function of the input waveforms (heres a paper [edit: woop, nevermind, that’s a kind of different thing. what i had in mind was computing the bessel function and limiting mod depth, or bandlimiting mod signal, to constrain output of bessel func. this requires integrating the modulator so it’s not easy. deep rabbit hole.]).
then there is just they way that these systems actually converge on, or orbit around harmonic stability with the right settings, making glissandos and macro oscillations. in digital we can approximate with slews, delay, filtering, and added noise… but yeah, not the same.
i think if someone were to design an analog dual osc that was designed for “digital-like” fm synthesis, one thing that might help is a trigger input for sync. so at the start of a note you force the mod and carrier to be in sycnhronous phase, then let them go their merry way. is that a thing yet? if not, why not?
PS: speaking of chowning/stanford/yamaha, here’s a pretty fun piece my mom made, with max mathews performing. it uses tg77. she was really into fractal waveforms and made some kind of wild system of taking FFT of a fractal and turning it into tg77 sysex for additive waveforms. then using (approximately) irrational mod/carrier ratios related to the fractal dimensions and stuff. i think it’s quite musical but also not what we typically think of as “dx7 sound”
the 90s