Melodyne Three years before Celemony was founded, Peter Neubäcker was working on a research experiment with sound. This experiment later turned into the
Melodyne pitch correction product. Melodyne has become a tool which is used by a large number of professional record producers worldwide to tune and manipulate audio signals, typically a singer's vocals. Melodyne also has facilities for time-stretching and rebuilding melodies. It can also be used to aid the creation of backing vocals from an existing lead vocal. The first public viewing of Melodyne was at the Winter
NAMM Show in 2001, and it has since won various awards. As of May 2020, the current release is Melodyne 5, which can correct the intonation on vocal tracks. The
algorithm now detects the presence and extent of the unpitched (noise-like) components of the vocal sound as well as breaths, which it then processes separately from the pitched components. The volume balance between the pitched and unpitched components can be adjusted. New possibilities for dynamic contouring are afforded by the Fade Tool and the Leveling Macro, as they too work on a per-note basis, even with polyphonic audio material. With the Chord Track (and the Pitch Grid configured accordingly), recordings and samples can be adapted to the harmonic structure and chords of songs. Artists who use the software include
Herbie Hancock,
Björk,
Coldplay,
Peter Gabriel and
Thomas Newman. It is also used in classical music for the pitch analysis of speech. Composer
Jonathan Harvey and
IRCAM engineers used Melodyne to extract melodic material for his composition
Speakings.
Capstan Capstan is a program for eliminating
wow and
flutter from recordings. == See also ==