

READ THE COMMUNITY GUIDELINES BEFORE POSTING ANY THREADS!!!Ĭheck out the reddit guide to self promotion for site-wide guidelines If you're just getting started check out the Beginners Guide Posting Rules This is a community focused on learning and improvement.Įxplore the wealth of resources here and elsewhere before asking for help, do your own research. It's still not 100% transparent by any means, but it's a massive improvement - enough to keep its users happy, we suspect.Community Guidelines - Resources - Gear Guide - Discord Chat - IRC Chat - 2016 MIXTAPE It's hard to overstate quite how important EFX 3's two new features are - they allow it to produce the more natural pitch correction that users of the full Auto-Tune have enjoyed for years, and they make it by far the most creative budget tuner on the market. You can even automate the control to fix individual dodgy notes but leave the better ones alone. The second new control, Humanize, offers a similarly profound improvement on EFX 2's less configurable setup.Įssentially, it treats short and long notes differently, correcting short ones but leaving long ones unaffected to an extent determined by the Humanize slider, so that your singer's natural vibrato and note transitions are maintained for longer notes. Set it to zero and you get that iconic unnatural note-hopping the higher you raise it beyond that, the more natural the slides from pitch to pitch sound. The first is Retune Speed, which allows you to set, in milliseconds, the speed of the pitch correction.

There are just two new features in EFX 3, both of which have been brought in from the full Auto-Tune 7. One thing Auto-Tune EFX has never been great at, though, is creating natural-sounding vocals - and its this shortcoming that version 3 seeks to address first and foremost.


These produce fairly impressive (if unnatural) flourishes and patterns of the type you've undoubtedly heard in action on a variety of hits and club classics over the last few years. Auto-Tune EFX 2 introduced Auto-Motion, which enabled prescribed musical tuning patterns to be triggered (there's a substantial list of presets, and you can program your own using a musicXML editor), based on the pitch of the audio it's receiving when the trigger is engaged.
