![]() ![]() The DNA polyphonic functionality is only available in this Editor version. I’ll explain a bit more ARA and DNA later on. To manipulate audio data, usually you’d import a waveform into some type of audio editor. You can then cut the waveform into different parts, and move those around, delete them, etc. Digital technology is great isn’t it? I could do that on my Amiga 2000 back in the early ’90s. ![]() Well, it’s a lot better than that these days. With Melodyne Editor, when you load in the waveform, it is displayed on a grid. The waveform is broken into separate pitches, instead of one whole waveform, and you can see what the note values are along the left side. In its most basic form, you can drag each little section (Celemony calls these “blobs”) up/down/left right, and it will change the pitch and/or timing. You have nearly unlimited control over the content you’ve brought into Melodyne Editor. There are a couple of ways to start using Melodyne: If you use the standalone version, you would load up an audio file and go ahead with editing. If you have loaded it in as a plugin, you use the “Transfer” button to be able to use it on the audio. Some quick notes about ARA: it is an extension that adds on to the capabilities of the plugin and your DAW (if your DAW supports it) and lets them communicate in a new way. Pitch, rhythm, tempo and more can be passed between the two easily, as if Melodyne Editor was actually another part of your DAW that’s built-in. If your DAW supports ARA, you just click “Transfer”, select a section of audio, and start playback. When you get to where you want it to end, stop playback in your DAW, and then edit away in Melodyne Editor. ![]() When it is first loading in the audio, Melodyne needs some time to analyze it. That’s why it can’t be used like some other real-time plugins, such as reverb, chorus, or delay. After it’s loaded in, then there is no delay, and you can move/edit blobs right away. In Melodyne Essential, the basic version available from Celemony, you can edit monophonic or rhythmic/unpitched types of audio. With the Editor version, you get the huge advantage of DNA.ĭNA (Direct Note Access) lets Melodyne Editor display and edit polyphonic audio.
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