On Mon, Feb 01, 2010 at 12:04:17AM +0100, Igor Brkic wrote: Hi!
> It is basically the same thing as fons' jretune or Tom's autotalent. I Thanks for mentioning jretune. I haven't noticed this, but just asked Fons for a copy. Autotalent is completely unusable, the artefacts are just too obvious. If you like, check out http://adi.loris.tv/testfiles.tar.bz2 The "corrected" version ruins your whole production. ;) I tried VocProc, it's less critical, but it's a little hard to find suitable settings for threshold and attack. > it. I have not tried any of the above for now, so I cannot say > anything about sound quality differences. What I hear for now: It's better than autotalent, but I'm waiting for jretune to test. The idea of selecting the correct notes via toggle buttons as done in jretune is good, it's the same as in autotune. Like all stand-alone jack tools, it's usability hell. Starting and wiring a tool sucks, the settings aren't saved in the session and so on. This should clearly be a LV2 plugin. (the whole issue becomes obvious when you think of mixing twelve vocal tracks) VocProc also connects to physical ins/out at startup. This is annoying. It's a typical post-production tool, so given that I'm already annoyed by manually wiring it as an Insert inside ardour, I'll first have to remove VocProc's physical IO to get the routing right. It doesn't make sense at all to connect anything at startup. Next: VocProc changes the volume. At Gain=0, it's off, which is weird. A 0dB gain means "no additional boost", but not off. Ok, so I tried Gain=1, which makes the output louder than the input. This isn't crucial, but it's not common. I don't want to alter a track's volume just because I added pitch correction. So plenty of room for improvements. ;) HTH -- mail: a...@thur.de http://adi.thur.de PGP/GPG: key via keyserver _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev