Analysis of pitches
Moderator: Martin Hairer
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- Posts: 21
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Analysis of pitches
Hi everyone, hi Mr. Hairer,
I am looking for an audio analysis software or add-on for Amadeus Pro that could analyze a short WAV files and give me both the pitches of the notes and their frequencies.
I have been looking around. The only one I could find so far is Melodyne, but it is $399, which is much too expensive for my needs.
Any suggestion will be most appreciated.
Thanks a lot! Bruno
I am looking for an audio analysis software or add-on for Amadeus Pro that could analyze a short WAV files and give me both the pitches of the notes and their frequencies.
I have been looking around. The only one I could find so far is Melodyne, but it is $399, which is much too expensive for my needs.
Any suggestion will be most appreciated.
Thanks a lot! Bruno
- Martin Hairer
- Site Admin
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- Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 11:49 am
- Contact:
Analysis of pitches
Dear Bruno,
If you're just looking for the frequencies of a few individual notes, you can use the built-in
Sonogram and Spectrum tools (see the Analyze menu). Best,
Martin -- HairerSoft http://www.hairersoft.com/
I am looking for an audio analysis software or add-on for Amadeus Pro that could analyze a short WAV files and give me both the pitches of the notes and their frequencies.
If you're just looking for the frequencies of a few individual notes, you can use the built-in
Sonogram and Spectrum tools (see the Analyze menu). Best,
Martin -- HairerSoft http://www.hairersoft.com/
Analysis of pitches
Amadeus "spectrum" command?
Chuck
On 6/8/18 3:38 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
Chuck
On 6/8/18 3:38 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
Hi everyone, hi Mr. Hairer,
I am looking for an audio analysis software or add-on for Amadeus Pro that could analyze a short WAV files and give me both the pitches of the notes and their frequencies.
I have been looking around. The only one I could find so far is Melodyne, but it is $399, which is much too expensive for my needs.
Any suggestion will be most appreciated.
Thanks a lot! Bruno
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Bruno Deschenes
bruno@musis.ca
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- Posts: 21
- Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2008 2:13 pm
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Analysis of pitches
Actually, if you put the hairline at the frequency it gives the
frequency and the note name based on 440 A.
Chuck
On 6/9/18 3:01 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
frequency and the note name based on 440 A.
Chuck
On 6/9/18 3:01 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
Yes, but spectrum gives the frequencies, but not the notes name.
Bruno
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Bruno Deschenes
bruno@musis.ca
Analysis of pitches
Is there a way to use the Spectrum function, which clusters many frequencies around each primary tone, to more immediately identify those primaries?
On Jun 9, 2018, at 4:14 PM, Charles Jonah <Chuck@charlesjonah.org> wrote:
Actually, if you put the hairline at the frequency it gives the frequency and the note name based on 440 A.
Chuck
On Jun 9, 2018, at 4:14 PM, Charles Jonah <Chuck@charlesjonah.org> wrote:
Actually, if you put the hairline at the frequency it gives the frequency and the note name based on 440 A.
Chuck
On 6/9/18 3:01 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
Yes, but spectrum gives the frequencies, but not the notes name.
Bruno
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Bruno Deschenes
bruno@musis.ca
Analysis of pitches
You can certainly change what you see on a sine wave by changing the
windowing function -- whether it will really help in the case of reql
music with real instrumentalists and singers, I have my doubts.
Chuck
windowing function -- whether it will really help in the case of reql
music with real instrumentalists and singers, I have my doubts.
Chuck
Is there a way to use the Spectrum function, which clusters many frequencies around each primary tone, to more immediately identify those primaries?
On Jun 9, 2018, at 4:14 PM, Charles Jonah <Chuck@charlesjonah.org> wrote:
Actually, if you put the hairline at the frequency it gives the frequency and the note name based on 440 A.
Chuck
On 6/9/18 3:01 PM, bdeschenes wrote:
Yes, but spectrum gives the frequencies, but not the notes name.
Bruno
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Bruno Deschenes
bruno@musis.ca