Pitch analyzer Vsti ?
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- KVRAF
- 1789 posts since 17 Mar, 2004 from Bretagne, the west of France
Somebody knows if there is a pitch analyser VST somewhere ?
Or an executable could do to...
Thanks
Or an executable could do to...
Thanks
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- KVRist
- 180 posts since 26 Sep, 2004
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- KVRAF
- 3386 posts since 21 May, 2004 from Deep in the Heartlessness of Texas
Depending on what you want to do with the pitch once you've detected it, Reaper just implemented ReaTune, for tuning instruments. Haven't tried it yet, but one forum member here says that it outputs MIDI.
There's also the Melodyne plug-in, of course, for the ultimate in pitch detection.
There's also the Melodyne plug-in, of course, for the ultimate in pitch detection.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 1789 posts since 17 Mar, 2004 from Bretagne, the west of France
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- Tunesmith
- 2889 posts since 12 Mar, 2002 from Toronto
is there anything that identifies maj/min harmonies too on top of root note detection?
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- KVRAF
- 3386 posts since 21 May, 2004 from Deep in the Heartlessness of Texas
The only program that I know of that will do polyphonic detection is Melodyne Studio 3. You can't shift individual notes within a chord, to change it from major to minor tonality, though. Their take on it is that that sort of pitch shifting may be literally impossible.
However, MS3 will write detected notes out as MIDI, presumably correctly, and that means you could, for instance, play a guitar chord, have it detected polyphonically, then export to MIDI, change some notes, and have a synth or sampler replay the altered chord.
At the very least, assuming the polyphonic pitch detection actually works well, you could presumably write to MIDI and look at the piano roll to see what's going on with a progression.
However, MS3 will write detected notes out as MIDI, presumably correctly, and that means you could, for instance, play a guitar chord, have it detected polyphonically, then export to MIDI, change some notes, and have a synth or sampler replay the altered chord.
At the very least, assuming the polyphonic pitch detection actually works well, you could presumably write to MIDI and look at the piano roll to see what's going on with a progression.

