Great video my guy, when transposing though it goes down semitones(+/- 50 cents). 600 or 6 semitones being half an octave and 1200 or 12 being a full octave. So +2 would actually be B
Edit: I was wrong, realized it's 100 cents a semi...When transposing though it goes up or down semitones(+/- 100 cents). 1200 or 12 being a full octave. So +2 would actually be B.
Transpose correlates to semitones or half notes not whole notes. So you're going from C to C#(sharp) [+1] instead of going from C to D[+2]. That's why an octave is 12 semitomes instead of 8. Great vid tho!
I'm a musician, and i came to see how to change the pitch of a track, but everything you say about the pitch and how the notes goes, is wrong. there's notes between C and D, also between B and C, and more... also the 50 cent... if something is in tune you shouldn't touch that . because when you change the pitch you just wanna chance step by step
Thank you Jamaal, although all these techniques are keeping the tempo, thats why they are destructive to the original signal. Is there an option to pitch it in a more classic way like you doing it on a turntable? But without sampling it, but directly within the audio window? Thx and keep up the good content:))