
> searches for detune were rather frustrating.

> Somehow I hadn't equated it with pitch shifting before, and my google > dramatic as that, but the issue remains. As I plan to detune by only a few cents, it won't be quite so > to 22050 and played back at 44100 lasts 1/2 second, and is higher in

> is to resample and play back at the original sample rate, and in that What I want to do is basically to pitch shift the signal. > you say, to keep everything the same but just at a different sample > I had on my nearsighted glasses and forgot that resample is usually, as > I'm sorry my original post was rather vague. When you say resampling, what do you mean? If course,Įliminating any frequencies above half the sample rate is necessary, but Without altering the duration or frequency content. > Would you elaborate on that? I thought that resampling a signal didĪ think of resampling a signal as converting if to a new sample rate >Resampling doesn't necessarily alter duration. > and the way plugins work is they take a block of n samples and return a > More context: this will be an audio processing plugin (VST and DSSI), > frequency of" as in re-tune a musical instrument. > I think maybe the OP is using the phrase "retune" to mean "change the Detune is good for getting a more natural effect, only a little is needed (a.

Can you provide context?Įngineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. I know of tuning only in an analog circuit, although resonanceĮffects exist also in digital filters. Resampling doesn't necessarily alterĭuration. > processing a block you would have a different number of samples than > but resampling involves changing the duration as well, so after How does one detune a signal? My understanding is that you resample,
