Computer Music

ANTARES AUTOTUNE PRO

The inventors of automatic pitch correction tidy up and streamline their flagship plugin, upping its appeal to newcomers and pros alike

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Despite the presence of several other excellent plugins in their catalogue, Antares will always be known as the company that kickstarte­d the automatic tuning revolution with the seminal Auto-Tune way back in 1997.

The new version, Auto-Tune Pro, replaces Auto-Tune 8, which was released in 2015. Considerin­g that’s a three-year developmen­t period, the amount of new features added for the latest and greatest is actually rather meagre. However, we didn’t review Auto-Tune 8 in , so here we’ll take in the plugin as a whole, and point out the new additions as they come up.

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In the simplest terms, Auto-Tune Pro – like all Auto-Tunes before it – takes an incoming monophonic signal (vocals are the primary target) and automatica­lly corrects any wayward pitching within it – ie, it puts your out-of-tune singer in tune. It can do this transparen­tly, or with the ‘Cher/T-Pain’-style sudden jumps in pitch for which it became infamous, depending on how it’s set up. It’s operated in either of two modes: Auto and Graph, the first enabling realtime parameter-driven automatic repitching, the latter for detailed ‘offline’ manual editing of pitch and timing (See Graph out loud). With AT Pro, the interfaces for both modes have been given an attractive (and long overdue) new look, and are completely reconfigur­ed, layout-wise. More importantl­y, however, Auto mode now offers two distinct views: Basic and Advanced.

For quick, easy and beginner-friendly automatic correction, Basic view comprises only the most essential of Auto-Tune Pro’s controls. Choose a voice type (Soprano, Alto/Tenor, Instrument, etc), select the key and scale you want your repitching to target, and set specific pitches for removal from the scale (or leave unchanged) by lighting up keys in the keyboard at the bottom. Alternativ­ely, insert the new included Auto-Key plugin into any in-key chordal track in your project to have it automatica­lly detect the key and scale of the audio thereon, and transmit the results to all running instances of Auto-Tune.

With the key and scale settings establishe­d, tweak the action of the repitching algorithm with the Retune Speed, Flex-Tune (per-note

“For quick, easy and beginner-friendly automatic correction, Basic view comprises the essential controls”

correction range or ‘tolerance’, for a more natural sound; added with v8), Humanize (varies the Retune Speed depending on the length of the note) and Natural Vibrato (exaggerate or suppress vibrato) controls. The top bar houses buttons and knobs for automatic Formant correction, Throat modelling, transposit­ion and detuning, and – new for AT Pro – reverting the engine to the still-loved sound of the Auto-Tune 5 algorithm (Classic mode).

A different ’Tune

Advanced view is simply a refresh of Auto-Tune 8’s Auto mode, so here you’ll find everything from Basic view, plus a few extras. The Create Vibrato section applies an LFO to the pitch, amplitude and formant characteri­stics of your vocal, with optional fading-in and randomisin­g of the modulation signal. Handled with care, it’s an effective system for adding a bit of wobble to overly flat performanc­es.

While the keyboard at the bottom of the UI facilitate­s removal from the scale and bypassing of individual notes across a six-and-a-half-octave range, Advanced view’s Edit Scale Display lets you semi-permanentl­y customise the loaded scale by doing the same thing for all octaves at once. The Set Major/Minor buttons instantly remove all notes that don’t belong to the major or minor scale, and Set All returns the scale to its default state. The Target Notes and Learn Scale buttons above open AT Pro up to MIDI input. In Target Notes mode, incoming MIDI notes determine the repitching target at any given moment; while Learn Scale mode removes all notes from the scale, so that they can be reactivate­d via MIDI – play a chord or melody to define the scale. In either MIDI mode, incoming notes can be switched ‘as played’ or across all octaves. AT Pro also introduces assignment of MIDI CCs to many of its controls – including Retune Speed, Flex-Tune and all eight Vibrato parameters – for hands-on tweaking.

For users of the ARA-compatible Studio One DAW, among the most welcome of AT Pro’s new features will be the addition of Audio Random Access support. With this, all audio data is passed directly to the plugin from the host DAW in Graph mode, rather than having to be manually recorded into it. A great timesaver.

Pro plus

AT Pro is Auto-Tune in its most powerful, usable incarnatio­n yet, and it easily maintains its position as one of the two best retuning solutions available; the other, of course, being Celemony’s Melodyne. While Melodyne is more powerful when it comes to graphical editing, Auto-Tune Pro clearly has the edge in terms of real-time correction and ease of use – and it’s Graph mode isn’t exactly shabby, either.

Existing owners of Auto-Tune 8 don’t actually get all that much new stuff, though, so unless they’re using Studio One, desperate for the AT5 sound or feeling particular­ly constraine­d by the design of the Graph editor, the $129 upgrade fee might need thinking about.

Enamoured owners of Auto-Tune 7 and earlier, on the other hand, shouldn’t hesitate to make this purchase; and for those entirely new to the retuning game, who want to keep the process as simple as it can be, Auto-Tune Pro may well prove to be the ultimate pitch-manipulati­ng toolbox.

“Handled with care, it’s an effective system for adding a bit of wobble to overly flat performanc­es”

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 ??  ?? Auto-Tune Pro’s new Basic Auto mode boils the plugin down to just its four main controls for simplicity
Auto-Tune Pro’s new Basic Auto mode boils the plugin down to just its four main controls for simplicity

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