Hi Tyler, See this quote from the studio recorder manual below. It sounds like, (at least from this part of the manual, that pitch can be changed! "Change Pitch The change pitch command modifies the pitch of the document or a selection. This command can be used, for example, to restore recorded material to its original pitch, assuming the original pitch can be determined. Note that this command removes all index tones in its path. The Change Pitch dialog contains two edit boxes where you specify the pitch change relative to the current pitch. The first box contains the number of semitones to deflect the current pitch, and the second box contains the number of cents. A semitone is one note of the twelve-tone musical scale, and a cent is 1 / 100 of a semitone. This gives you very fine control of the pitch change. Use posative values to increase the pitch, and negative values to decrease the pitch. Note that changing the pitch also changes the time of the modified material. There is one more control in the dialog, the quality box. Using a higher quality setting takes longer, but uses a better resampling process for the pitch change. These quality settings are the same as the ones found in the Resample dialog." Harry ----- Original Message ----- From: Tyler To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Saturday, November 05, 2011 12:07 PM Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: special affects in studio recorder? I once heard that one of my friends had temporarily used Audacity, a similar audio editor. With it, the pitch could be increased, but not the speed. Just what we need in Studio Recorder! On Sat, 5 Nov 2011 11:52:37 -0400, Harry Brown wrote: >Hi Judy and all, >I agree with you, completely! >I think it would be so cool if there was a way to take all the special affects >in Gold Wave, (and those are found, all in 1 folder, right?) If that folder >could be copyed to the clipboard, then pasted into the studio recorder folder, >you would then have all the affects you need! >Of course, we'd have to put in a menu item called special affects. >Who knows, just thinking outloud. Is this even possible to do?I haven't done >it yet, but I'm thinking about trying it with my version of studio recorder. >It's already got multitracking, now all we need is the affects. >Harry >----- Original Message ----- >From:Judy Watford >To:studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx >Sent: Friday, November 04, 2011 7:18 PM >Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: special affects in studio recorder? >I would get rid of all other recording programs if we could have a noise >reduction plugin... >Judy >-----Original Message----- >From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx >[mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mary Emerson >Sent: Friday, November 04, 2011 1:14 PM >To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: special affects in studio recorder? >Harry, >Studio Recorder was originally designed for use in producing digital talking >books, so there aren't any special effects built in. >Mary