A novel Doppler global velocimeter (DGV) with high temporal resolution is presented as a tool for measuring spatially resolved flow turbulence spectra for three components in order to characterize complex flows, e. g. in turbomachines. The proposed DGV technique is based on a sinusoidal laser frequency modulation. Its maximum available measurement rate equals the modulation frequency and amounts currently to 100 kHz. The harmonic analysis of the detector array signals reduces errors due to detector offset drifts, detector sensitivity changes, ambient light, camera misalignment and beam splitting errors in comparison with conventional DGV systems. The achievable statistical errors are considered by theoretical investigations and by experiments regarding detector noise as well as temporal and spatial scattered light fluctuations, e. g. due to speckles. An error propagation finally provides the determination of the noise power spectral density occurring as virtual turbulence in the measured turbulence spectra. It amounts to about 1.2 x 10(-4) (m(2) s(-2)) Hz(-2) for mean flow velocities up to 40 m s(-1) and 1 nW mean scattered light power per detector element. It rises for higher flow velocities in dependence on the flow turbulence. For the example of a nozzle flow with a mean velocity of 85 m s(-1), which is disturbed by a cylinder, the final uncertainty is demonstrated to result in an effective bandwidth of the acquired turbulence spectra of 10 kHz and is thus sufficiently high for flow turbulence analysis. The measured velocity spectra agree well with comparison measurements using a hot-wire anemometer.