unix-guy
Master of RTFM
"Hercules Hercules"
"Hercules Hercules"
Yes!!! Cliff, you are amazing!
Improved Looper cross-fade at start/end of loop.
confirmed.Using the pitch shifter to drop tune seems far more usable now. Almost can't feel the latency.
Very interesting the improvements on the pitch block! Thank you!
Do you think to extend the same improvement also for Quantum FW?
Any chance for a formant shifter coming along with that?Oops, just noticed I forgot to remove the "Virtual Capo" pitch type. Ignore it for now. That was supposed to be a simple, single-voice chromatic shift for down-tuning and virtual capo use.
No. For all those clamoring for the "formant shifter" have you used the one in the competing product? I'm not saying it's useless but I can't find any use for it. It only works with single notes. If you play a chord it's a garbled mess. And even single notes don't sound convincing and it adds even more latency. The whole point of drop tuning is to play songs in a lower key. If you can't play chords with the formant shifting on then what's the point?Any chance for a formant shifter coming along with that?
Nope, I've never used the one on the K, I've just heard a few convincing samples of that.No. For all those clamoring for the "formant shifter" have you used the one in the competing product? I'm not saying it's useless but I can't find any use for it. It only works with single notes. If you play a chord it's a garbled mess. And even single notes don't sound convincing and it adds even more latency. The whole point of drop tuning is to play songs in a lower key. If you can't play chords with the formant shifting on then what's the point?
To do formant shifting/correction right requires more advanced pitch shifting techniques which simply incur too much latency. That type of thing is best reserved for plug-in applications. To do it right you need to analyze large sections of data, find the transients, silence, add pitch markers, etc. All this requires a lot of history.
I have three competing products here. I've tested the latest pitch shifter against all of them. The Axe-Fx III is more stable (less warble in complex chords), has lower latency and track single notes better than any of them.
No. For all those clamoring for the "formant shifter" have you used the one in the competing product? I'm not saying it's useless but I can't find any use for it. It only works with single notes. If you play a chord it's a garbled mess. And even single notes don't sound convincing and it adds even more latency. The whole point of drop tuning is to play songs in a lower key. If you can't play chords with the formant shifting on then what's the point?
To do formant shifting/correction right requires more advanced pitch shifting techniques which simply incur too much latency. That type of thing is best reserved for plug-in applications. To do it right you need to analyze large sections of data, find the transients, silence, add pitch markers, etc. All this requires a lot of history.
I have three competing products here. I've tested the latest pitch shifter against all of them. The Axe-Fx III is more stable (less warble in complex chords), has lower latency and track single notes better than any of them.
Very cool so that preset you posted that you can use for your Drop zone type pedal in front of amp.correct ?
huh?