The music world may change a bit
April 10, 2008 6:39 pm
categories:
Music, Technology
Today I took notice of a great, great invention that may shake the music world. It’s called so far as Direct Note Access, acronyms DNA no innocently. It’s a little complicated to explain, but basically Peter Neubäcker created a way to split notes from a recorded chord and manipulate each note separately. What you already can do in a MIDI file you will may do in a WAV file.
And by this I mean that it will be possible to anyone change music notes, changing chords from minor to major, music scale, pieces of harmony, timing, pitch, arrangements, whatever! with a click of a button. Sounds crazy? Let’s see what they say at their website:
Direct Note Access is a technology that makes the impossible possible: for the first time in audio recording history you can identify and edit individual notes within polyphonic audio material. The unique access that Melodyne affords to pitch, timing, note lengths and other parameters of melodic notes will now also be afforded to individual notes within chords.
Examples of use: tune a guitar after recording, correct harmony vocals that are out of tune, or fix their timing, turn major chords to minor (and vice versa), switch tone scales, mute single notes, remix volume levels, etc. – all after the performance is already taped!
Enough reading…watch the video!
Via Daniel DP.
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