Inner Pitch Is A FREE Pitch Shifter By Auburn Sounds

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Auburn Sounds released Inner Pitch, a pitch shifter plugin for Windows and macOS, available as a Free Edition (with limited features) and Full Edition. Enter our giveaway to win the Full Edition (three FREE copies available).

Let’s take a look at the Free Edition first.

Inner Pitch Free Edition

Inner Pitch is a pitch-shifting delay plugin. In our email exchange, the Auburn Sounds developer explained that they were striving for the highest possible pitch-shifting quality with this release.

That’s no surprise, as Auburn Sounds’ impressive Graillon 2 is still our favorite free autotune plugin.

Inner Pitch follows the same path, delivering some of the best-sounding pitch shifting I’ve heard in a plugin. Of course, things get more grainy as you push its pitch-shifting algorithms to the extremes, but the output remains impressively natural if you don’t strive too far from the original pitch.

I tested Inner Pitch on some of my vocal recordings and loved how the combination of pitch and format shifting transforms the voice while still sounding human.

It was super easy to recreate this vocal trick showcased by Jamie Lidell using Soundtoys Little Alterboy:

Of course, my vocals are absolutely nowhere near Jamie’s, but Inner Pitch did a fantastic job with pitch and formant shifting.

And using Inner Pitch on vocals is just scratching the surface.

Pitch shifting is essentially a sound designer’s magic wand, as it lets you completely transform and reshape sounds. I often use it to get unusual textures from instruments like guitars and strings.

A high-quality pitch shifter like Inner Pitch is also essential while mixing a song, as you want all recordings to be perfectly tuned to get the highest quality mix.

The feature set is quite straightforward. You can adjust the intensity of pitch shifting, formant shifting, tonal boost, and color. The plugin also features a 3-band spectral EQ for fine-tuning the tone.

What’s impressive is that all of these features are available in the Free Edition.

Inner Pitch Full Edition

The Full Edition unlocks the quality fine-tuning features, allowing you to get the highest possible pitch-shifting quality for a cost of $38.67 ($29 intro sale) and some additional CPU cycles.

Is it worth the upgrade?

If you want the highest quality of pitch processing, then yes, absolutely. It’s also a nice way to show appreciation to the developer if you’re using the Free Edition extensively in your work.

Auburn Sounds provides some of the highest-quality audio plugins on the market, and all of their products come with a powerful Free Edition.

The Giveaway

Auburn Sounds kindly provided three free copies of Inner Pitch Full Edition to three lucky BPB readers.

To enter the giveaway, answer the following question in the comments section below: What are your favorite secret (or not-so-secret) techniques for sound design?

We will randomly select and announce the lucky winner on this page on Monday, October 15th.

Good luck, everyone, and thank you for reading BPB!

The lucky winners are (drumroll, please!):

1) Sotos

2) James

3) Kahlil Smith

Congratulations! You will soon receive an email with information about your prize.

Everyone else, better luck next time and thank you for reading BPB!

Free download: Inner Pitch

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About Author

Tomislav is a music producer and sound designer from Belgrade, Serbia. He is also the founder and editor-in-chief at Bedroom Producers Blog.

329 Comments

  1. Create a parallel track and High pass (or low pass depending on the effect) and saturate the heck out of the remaining frequencies!

  2. For nice pads I like to send them to a return track that has an auto-filter on it. I might add a little chorus.

    Mixing hats with a little noise seems to be really nice too.

  3. Using an extreme compressor like AberrantDSP ShapeShifter to hard-compress an instrumental solo which has little breaks in it. So when there is nothing playing, the background noise is pushing to the front, giving the solo some weird attenuation.

  4. Make a melody with effects, even whole track. Render to audio without drums. Put in sampler and slice. Make a new melody. Then Halftime and OTT

  5. Find the perfect plugins, samples, etc. that flow well with your music. Keep on browsing through the stuff that you have until your song sounds right.

  6. Pitch Shifting, Detune, Reverse, Reverb, Delay, Distort/Saturation or adding a vintage vibe is what I do most when I’m sound designing.

  7. Claus Petersen

    on

    Sampling, reversing the track, and use a lot of Fx Plugins is some of the things i do. But i also use my own recorded sounds, and then add some effects to them. But it all depends on what sound design im trying to archive

  8. I don’t have any secrets for sound design, but a few things I find helpful are, making sure it sounds good on a variety of devices, and limit the post processing so it still sounds natural

  9. Something I started messing about with in the 1970s involving a length of plastic drain pipe, a sheet of aluminium, contact mics, an antique piano harp, and a toffee hammer.

  10. Usar unos presets que me llamen la atencion y empezar a jugar con los parametros, luego empiezo a crear ciertas capas y dependiendo lo que busque agrego plugins bitcrusher, pitch etc…

  11. Slap delay always makes great sense of space. Format shifting and pitch shifting always inspires me when I am strapped for ideas.

  12. Time resampling (slowing) audio inside After Effects, haha. Idk why, but AE makes such stretching sound very pleasant.

  13. A bit of a long answer coming,haha. In reference to synth sound design, my favourite techniques involve experimenting with waveform blending and modulation to create rich and evolving sounds. Combining various oscillators and applying modulation sources like LFOs and envelopes can yield complex and dynamic synthesizer tones.

  14. Reversing a sound to give an interesting build up and texture to the original audio file.

    In general use the philosophy off “Less is more”.

  15. Sound Design wise, I enjoy simply sample chopping & I also enjoy create new sounds from pre existing samples through heavy time-stretching, granular synthesis, loop x-fading and effects chains.

  16. pitch shifting works wonders for me, grain delay does miracles and warping is out of this world. And not to mention filtering, if that counts

  17. I always like the trick where you mono the overheads in the verses and stereo them in the choruses, background vocals as well. Boost them in volume about 3db. Makes a great improvement. Thanks!

  18. I like to record guitar, add reverse delay, then play over it with a crybaby wah-wah pedal. I also use use a wah in reverse direction from normal to get some interesting rhythm sounds.

  19. Taking some Pad sounds (probably sprinkled with some soft piano or similar) and run it through PaulXStretch. Add (Valhalla) supermassive reverb as you like.

  20. Combining and layering sounds and samples to create new and complex, imaginative sounds that create the vibe I want.

  21. Bookmarked this for inspiration – definitely some interesting replies here!

    My answer would be: I try to learn and really understand the tools I’m using. That should give me the greatest sound design power.

  22. To have insight into sound design and to experiment!! To know the “rules of sound design” and then to “break the rules” all in the name of experimentation!

  23. What an awesome plug-in, thank you Auburn Sounds, Tomislav BPB

    Don’t forget that holding the shift key allows you to fine tune the pitch 👍

  24. Creating instruments by layering sampled sounds with synthetic sounds e.g sampled piano with a synth piano sound, and then tweaking pitch, sustain, etc on the idividual layers to taste

  25. Run a sample through the modular, depending on desired effect, process, mangle, modulate to taste. Make sure it sounds nothing like original audio, then re-record through a mixer with cool saturation. Use it on a track as is fitting for instrument, atmos, fix, or melodic or percussive element.

  26. Run a sample through the modular, depending on desired effect, process, mangle, modulate to taste. Make sure it sounds nothing like original audio, then re-record through a mixer with cool saturation. Use it on a track as is fitting for instrument, atmos, fix, or melodic or percussive element.

  27. Michael Svedberg

    on

    Definetely, less is more! When for an example trying to achieve a more punchy bassline, don´t add a lot of basses, instead try to remove a couple of them and you will get a better clarity and punch.

  28. Double a mono sound, pan one left and the other one right, and pitch just one. Instant stereo :) Eventually you can automate this pitch so it evolves with time.
    That, and of course saturation everywhere!

  29. I pay a lot of attention to Dan Worral.

    Parallel process multiple streams whilst tucking in heavily edited and slightly lower-volumed (and processed) secondary and parallel tracks. This technique is rather spurious, but it opens up avenues for further exploration.

    When I have some money, I want to buy Andrew Huang’s new plugin. It does everything I know but much quicker and simpler. Plus, I like the dude without worshipping him too much…

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