thanks for trying luis. I'm a bit scared of actually implementing all these algorithms, I'm a beginner and this seems a bit too challenging. I've implemented a good pitch shifter and I need a good pitch detector for my auto tune project. (i know about plltrack, autotune.csd, amdf, and all other pitch trackers built in CSound) i tried AMDF with almost satisfactory results. many jumps, jitters, vibrato's and inaccuracies. i though something like tartini might help. maybe plltrack could do it but it has octave jumps. I've tried messing with the parameters but haven't figured it out (tested on vocal sample with my mac). thanks for the suggestion so far. any other ideas? On Sunday, August 11, 2013 at 3:35 AM, Victor Lazzarini wrote: > did you try plltrack? That's a pretty recent (and decent) algorithm. > On 10 Aug 2013, at 13:34, Machina wrote: > > > Hi > > > > i know CSound has some pitch detectors. i tried all of them, with AMDF performing best but not good enough IMO. > > I was looking up the state-of-the-art pitch detectors online and found TARTINI: > > > > > Dr Victor Lazzarini > Senior Lecturer > Dept. of Music > NUI Maynooth Ireland > tel.: +353 1 708 3545 > Victor dot Lazzarini AT nuim dot ie > > > > > > Send bugs reports to the Sourceforge bug trackers > csound6: > https://sourceforge.net/p/csound/tickets/ > csound5: > https://sourceforge.net/p/csound/bugs/ > Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here > To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk (mailto:sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk) with body "unsubscribe csound" > >