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Right. That's exactly what I meant. More of a superimposing of tone, than a tonal shift. Good because you can get a very large frequency range without sounding digitally munched, though vocoders have their own artifacts. I find them more musical to listen to. Mark Sottilaro "Mark S. Landman" wrote: > On Wednesday, June 12, 2002, at 09:31 AM, David Kuckhermann wrote: > > > Perhaps this is a stupid question (I know not much about vocoders), but > > how can you use a vocoder for pitchshifting? > > Not a stupid question at all, vocoders don't change the pitch, they > impose formants from another source on target audio, like a fancy > automatic set of tone controls. > > BUT, if you run drums in to analyze as formants, then use a built-in > oscillator (or any sound source with controllable pitch) as the target > audio, you can "change the pitch" of the drums by changing the > oscillators frequency. > > Not at all pitch shifting, but for things like drums, vocoding may sound > better… > > Best- > > mark