Numerous cartoons have used pitch shifters to produce distinctive animal voices.
Alvin and the Chipmunks recordings with David Seville (aka
Ross Bagdasarian) were created by recording vocal tracks at slow speeds, then playing them back at normal speeds.
Voice artist Mel Blanc used pitch shifting techniques to create the voices of
Tweety and
Daffy Duck. In the 1970s, reruns of shows like
I Love Lucy were sped up in order to run more advertisements during commercial breaks. The Eventide H910 Harmonizer was used to downward pitch-shift the characters' voices back to normal after the episode was sped up.
South Park creators
Trey Parker and
Matt Stone have used pitch shifting for most of their characters throughout the show's run. One notable early practitioner of pitch shifting in music is
Chuck Berry, who used the technique to make his voice sound younger. Many of the
Beatles' records from 1966 and 1967 were made by recording instrumental tracks a half-step higher and the vocals correspondingly low. Examples include "
Rain", "
I'm Only Sleeping", and "
When I'm Sixty-Four". Electronic musician
Burial is known for including pitch-shifted samples of vocal melodies in his songs.
Goregrind and occasionally
death metal use vocals that are often pitch-shifted to sound unnaturally low and guttural. The famous bass intro to the song "
Seven Nation Army" by
The White Stripes, is the result of guitarist
Jack White playing an
electric guitar through a pitch shifting effects pedal set to an octave below. The band was a duo, who lacked a bassist and had never previously used one in any of their music, choosing instead to mimic the sound of a bass guitar. From 1986 to 1988, American musician
Prince used pitch shifting to create his “Camille” vocals. The coda in the song “
The Bewlay Brothers” by
David Bowie features Bowie's voice distorted by varispeeding; this effect also appears throughout Bowie's 1967 song “
The Laughing Gnome”. ==See also==