![]() Now, it is time to start manipulating the pitch. You can now test it by clicking the play button on the right (be careful, I haven’t figured out a way to stop it, so be prepared to hear the whole recording.). Sound Mesinging, or whatever, depending on the title of your sound. Now, weather you loaded the file, or recorded it, on the main praat window, on the left under the Objects: label, it should say 1. On the menu bar, click Read, and from the dropdown menu click Read from File… You can try navigating to the file you want (wav or flac only as far as I can tell), or just type in it’s absolute location on the bottom line and click “Ok” (Ex: /home/jeremybubs/Music/Mesinging.wav) You can close it when you are done) B) Loading a file Then click Save to List & Close (Or just Save to List if you want record multiple sounds. When you are ready, click record and say whatever you want, or sing or whatever, and when you are done, click stop. ![]() In the bottom right-hand corner you can give the recording a name. You can try changing the Input Source to fix it if it won’t record. Try speaking into your microphone and seeing if the volume meter goes up. A) RecordingĬlick the new menu bar at the top, and on the drop-down menu, click Record Mono Sound… (If you have a stereo mic I suppose you could try recording stereo, but I have not idea how that will work with pitch detection.) A window will come up titled “SoundRecorder”. One thing to note is that I got a slight background squeal when recording in praat (maybe just my setup) so you might want to record another way (Sound Recorder or Audacity). flac file (.ogg is not supported and I don’t know about. You can either record a sound, or load a. Start up praat, and go to the window labeled praat (rather than the one labeled praat picture). I am not very experienced with praat, although this is what I figured out how to do (some of it from the original mailing list post, other I read from the manual or figured out).Īlthough it’s GUI isn’t too nice, and it isn’t designed for musical manipulation, it gets the job done. It will give you a T-pain like effect, but it requires you to manually place the notes (although it will detect the pitch for you). I eventually did find that praat (it’s in synaptic), a speech analysis tool, comes surprisingly close to autotune functionality. However, all the answers were unsatisfactory, either because they required manual pitch recognition (Not so good for the tone-deaf among us), or people confused it with pitch shifting in general. All I could find in terms of linux autotune was people also looking for autotune. Unfortunately everything I have found either cost money or wasn’t for linux, or required special setup (wine, or other nasty things). I have been looking around for a while for an autotune effect (pitch correction, or whatever name you care to call it) for linux. How-to: Autotune/ Pitch Correction Effect with Praat
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