Change Pitch

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Revision as of 08:50, 13 May 2013 by Windinthew (talk | contribs) (Update and ednote for current state of this effect)
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FrenchFlagSmall.png Cambiar tono

Use the Change Pitch effect to change the pitch of a track without changing its tempo (speed).
Accessed by: Effect > Change Pitch...
Change Pitch dialog

Change Pitch works by applying an up or down percentage change to the existing pitch of a selection. As well as choosing the percent change directly you can define it as:

  • a change from one pitch to another
  • a change in semitones
  • a change from one frequency to another.

Change Pitch senses the first detectable pitch in a selection and sets "Pitch from" and "Frequency (Hz) from" accordingly. These two controls are not a detection of the "key" or "tonality" of music.

Pitch

If you know both the key the original recording is in and the key you want to change it to, change both the Pitch "from" and "to" values.

Note that whether Pitch "to" goes to the selected note above the "from" pitch or to the selected note below the "from" pitch depends on on the algorithm, so you need to check that the direction of the "Semitones (half-steps)" box underneath Pitch "to" is going down (minus sign) or up (no sign) as you intend. You can change the semitones value instead if you need to change pitch in the other direction (see the example below).

  • Semitones (half-steps): If you don't know the key the original recording is in but you know how many semitones it needs to be changed, enter that value here. For example you could duplicate a vocal track and then apply Change Pitch with a value of +7 semitones (a major fifth) to create a harmony vocal.
Example: In the image above, we knew the music was in the key of A, and as its first note was the home (tonic) note, Audacity detected the pitch as A.

We want the key to be the C# above, instead of A. In this case, choosing "C#/Db in Pitch "to" goes to the C#/Db below, but C# is four semitones above A, so we change Semitones (half-steps) to 4 and then the interdependent Percent Change box changes from -37.004 to the required 25.992.

Gale 13May13:

"In the example above, the known key is being changed from F up to G."

I removed the above as the Up/Down button has gone. At present the main confusion is that we don't have an octave control, so you cannot e.g. use the Pitch controls to change from A up to C#/Db (+ 4 semitones); you can only go down from A to C#/Db (- 8 semitones). So the image addresses that. This is not an easy effect so we could have two examples if wanted, but let's see if Pitch "from" is fixed so that it updates Frequency "from" as I believe Steve intends.

Frequency (Hz)

The "from" input box initializes to the first detectable pitch in the selection and does not update if the other controls are changed. However if you know the original frequency and the frequency you want to change to, you can enter these in the "from" and "to" boxes. Detection of a steady sine tone will be quite accurate in which case you may only need to change the "to" input box to the desired frequency for the tone.

  • Percent Change: If you would like to change the pitch by a given percent, enter a value in this input box or use the slider.

Limitations

Change Pitch is a time-stretching effect, because it defies the normal expectation that to lower the pitch of the audio it is necessary to reduce its speed (and thus its length) and vice-versa. As with any time-stretching effect, some audible distortions will be expected at more extreme settings.

Due to weaknesses in its algorithm, Change Pitch does not keep the length exactly as before. This makes Change Pitch unsuitable for changing the pitch of individual very short notes. To avoid this problem, you can use Effect > Sliding Time Scale / Pitch Shift... instead, setting initial and final pitch change to the same amount.


Links

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