Be careful with Capstan. If there’s much vibrato in the original it will dry it up. Also insists on latching the music to a Western chromatic scale. And the algorithm is cranky sounding.
It superficially sounds ok at first blush but if you have a clean original to compare the results with you’ll hear it instantly. And watching what it thinks it should do to a an all digital source with zero wow is pretty alarming. It’s a great jitter-making plug-in.
If all you need to correct is a pitch drift Capstan is hitting it with a hammer.
If I can help let me know, there’s some clean ways to do this.
Please pardon the mispellings and occassional insane word substitution I'm on an iPhone
> On Oct 24, 2018, at 20:39, Ellis Burman <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Capstan is perfect for that, though quite expensive, though you can also
> rent it for much less.
>
> You can also use a pitch plug-in, even the one that comes with ProTools,
> and adjust the fine pitch graph in the automation lane in ProTools.
>
> Ellis
>
>> On Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 11:00 AM, Steven Smolian <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>> I'm looking for a pitch bending plug-in where I can adjust places on the
>> duration line by cents, not semi-tones. I use a PC and want it to work at
>> 96/24.
>>
>>
>>
>> I'm working with 78s and need to adjust pitch drift.
>>
>>
>>
>> Steve Smolian
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Ellis
> [log in to unmask]
> 818-846-5525
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