[studiorecorder] Re: special affects in studio recorder?
- From: "Neal Ewers" <neal.ewers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: <studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2011 12:22:46 -0500
That's because you are looking at the wrong thing. Try compress time
instead.
Neal
-----Original Message-----
From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tyler
Sent: Saturday, November 05, 2011 12:13 PM
To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: special affects in studio recorder?
Last I checked, the pitch changing affects the speed, too. If you raise it
up an octave, it sounds like a chipmunk at high speed. Audacity does that,
without the high speed part. Just what we need!
On Sat, 5 Nov 2011 13:00:28 -0400, Harry Brown wrote:
>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
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