thanks a lot for answering i feel the original havent been using any pitch detection. they wouldnt have got the same result. and it sounds a lot more natural than a vocoder process. pvspitch isnt a perfect pitch detector so the outcome cannot be seamless as my example On Thursday, December 26, 2013 at 2:14 AM, peiman khosravi wrote: > Sounds like a phase-vocoder that transposes the sample with its own fundamental frequency envelope inverted. I'm just guessing: you should be able to do this with a combination of mincer, pvsvoc (for spectral envelop preservation of transposed vocal samples), and pvspitch. > > The legato effect is pretty cool and totally doable with mincer too. And the polyphonic sampler is no hassle since you can have as many instances of the instrument as possible. > > > > > www.peimankhosravi.co.uk (http://www.peimankhosravi.co.uk) || RSS Feed (http://peimankhosravi.co.uk/miscposts.rss) || Concert News (http://spectralkimia.wordpress.com/) > > On 25 December 2013 19:50, David Mooney wrote: > > Sounds like a vocoder process to me, which can most certainly be done in Csound. > > > > --David Mooney > > > > > > On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 6:19 AM, Machina wrote: > > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtEoB9SqUoI > > > > > > can it be done in csound? > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Opaque Melodies > > http://opaquemelodies.com >