Vst Plugin Autotune81 Vst3 High Quality
Unlike modern AI tools that auto-detect scales, Autotune81 usually requires manual input. Set your Key (e.g., Cm) and Scale (Major/Minor/Pentatonic). Pro tip: Use the "Chromatic" scale if the vocalist is very experimental, but locking the scale eliminates 80% of wrong notes automatically.
When used as a corrective tool, Autotune81 excels. The "Retune Speed" knob behaves differently than classic units. At high speeds (near 0 ms), you get the classic "T-Pain" effect. However, at medium settings (20-40 ms), the plugin becomes nearly invisible.
We tested Autotune81 on a poorly pitched jazz vocal take. Unlike stock DAW pitch shifters that introduce "glassy" artifacts or warbling, Autotune81 preserved the natural formants of the voice. The result was a take that sounded like a perfect human performance, not a robot mimicking one. vst plugin autotune81 vst3 high quality
Beyond correction, Autotune81 is a powerful sound design tool. Here are three "high quality" tricks:
I ran a dry vocal take through four popular pitch correctors: Antares Auto-Tune Pro, Melodyne 5, Waves Tune Real-Time, and Auto-Tune 81. Unlike modern AI tools that auto-detect scales, Autotune81
The biggest tell of a low-quality pitch corrector is the "chipmunk effect" when shifting vocals up or the "giant effect" when shifting down. High-quality correction requires formant shifting. Autotune81 includes a dedicated "Formant Knob" that allows you to alter pitch without altering the vocal tract length. This preserves the natural timbre of the singer, even if you transpose them by a fourth or fifth.
The UI looks like a 2003 radio shack meter crossed with a Buchla module. Knobs are large, labels are clear (Retune, Flex, Humanize, Mix). The graph mode (click the waveform icon) lets you drag notes like Melodyne, but with one killer feature: “Magnetic Grid” snaps drifting notes to the nearest chromatic or scale step without flattening vibrato. When used as a corrective tool, Autotune81 excels
Pro tip: Set “Humanize” to 35–50% when using Mode B. That retains the singer’s natural pitch attack while letting the Grit algorithm smear the sustain into a warm, chorused mess (in a good way).