Obi-Wan zenabI
New member
I was reading the old SOS review of the powered avantone mix cubes and it occurred to me that a sufficiently accurate pitch shift applied to a mix might help identify mixing and balance errors due to nodes and other gremlins in the room and the monitors, etc.
You would be, in effect, altering the relative nodal patterns. I'm pretty much a hack at mixing, so my idea may be absurd for reasons y'all are sure to supply.
Has anyone done this, or have I invented something? Would a shift have to be unusably large to lift or drop the mix far enough? Should I keep my day job?
Any pitch shifting I have done with Cubase has been full of artifacts and weird sounds; there have to be better algorithms out there...
You would be, in effect, altering the relative nodal patterns. I'm pretty much a hack at mixing, so my idea may be absurd for reasons y'all are sure to supply.
Has anyone done this, or have I invented something? Would a shift have to be unusably large to lift or drop the mix far enough? Should I keep my day job?
Any pitch shifting I have done with Cubase has been full of artifacts and weird sounds; there have to be better algorithms out there...