Have you ever tried a pitch shifter before or after a reverb? How cool/weird/interesting does it sound and can it be used in a mix ? Let’s find out!
Probably not going to work for most songs, but seems to work pretty well on these drums with a retro aesthetic.
I only played with octave shifts here but you can find some really strange effects with other intervals and formant shifting or by using different algorithms in ReaPitch.
Related videos
Introduction to ReaPitch and my presets
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Comments
5 responses to “Pitch Shifting A Reverb”
Hello, is it possible to process the reverb sound alone, without affecting the dry sound? Thanks.
That’s the situation we have here in the tutorial.
I was suspecting that, but I cannot see how precisely the routing is, if I send the dry signal to a bus reverb I always get both together and whatever process I do will affect both.
the reverb needs to output wet signal only.
I´ve tried that, but you get this metallic far away sound, it doesn´t disappear entirely. I cannot combine this 100% wet with the dry, because sounds completely wrong. In this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=My0_jIm4Gc4&list=PLe1lxu8fHox-XCeDFZPq6wELxj_Sllq8I&index=11
of the Pro audio files the guy puts an insert and after the reverb put some eq and a C4, this two effects touches the reverb only (in PTools)