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ivan@stellysee.de
From | "bob" <segarini@sympatico.ca> |
Subject | Re: Pitching a fit |
Date | Wed, 28 Jan 2004 13:44:44 -0500 |
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Truth...you can use them in real-time in the studio as well...that means you
can keep a great performance, even if you missed a note or two...
bob
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Seaman" <seamand@upmc.edu>
To: <audities@smoe.org>
Cc: "Doug Tybor" <cybertybor@comcast.net>
Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2004 4:31 PM
Subject: Pitching a fit
> In catching up on old digests, I came across the Antares Autotune thread:
>
> <<<Autotune is an effect you buy as hardware, which you would connect to
> your mixing board like a compressor or a reverb or whatever. It also
> comes as a plug-in, which is the brains of the effect in software form,
> that connects to the virtual mixing board on a computer with either
> protools or a competing product installed.>>>
>
> When Autotune first came out, a music store salesperson told me that there
> is a hardware version as well as the software version -- and that a
musician
> can hookup the hardware version and use it in live performance, presumably
> pitch correcting his/her singing in real time. This sounded too good to
be
> true for a pitch challenged singer such as myself. I was so skeptical at
> the time that I didn't look into it any further. So now I'm asking those
of
> you with Autotune know how - truth or fiction? Or somewhere in between?
>
>
>
>
>
>
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