![]() ![]() Plus, you can adjust Gain, Amount and Dry Mix – if you want to bring the original voiceover back in, which gives you a double-tuned effect. In addition to this, there’s Pitch Shift which adjusts the pitch of the voice, and Inertia which gives even more of that robotic effect. You’ll hear the voice is still going up and down in octaves as well, so to combat that, you can also change the Snap Range to be only one octave. ![]() Then, if you’d like to autotune to a particular note, you can switch off all the other notes by clicking on the keyboard keys and turning them from green to red. To start, if you turn up the Enable dial to 100%, you’ll get a T-Pain-style super-robotic effect. So, you’ll need to add some basic autotune effects. However, without doing anything else, it won’t do much to your voice. Now, to apply autotune to any voiceover in Audacity, simply select Graillon 2 in the Effect menu and the awesome window will pop up. Once you’ve enabled it, then it’ll show up in your Effect menu. You can then find and enable it in the Manage Plug-ins section of Audacity. Click to download it and run the installer (remember to make sure that you put the plugin into the right directory for your platform so Audacity can see it). It’s a live voice changer, and to download it – including the free edition – just head to the Graillon 2 page. ![]() The best thing is, it’s cross-platform compatible, just like Audacity, so it can be used on Windows, Mac or Linux. In this blog, I’m going to show you a plugin that no one else is talking about! I think it’s epic and a great way to autotune in Audacity. ![]()
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