Tuned

Autotune is a tool, just like any other. Itโ€™s neither good nor bad.

I like it when itโ€™s used deliberately and thoughtfully โ€” like in Charli XCXโ€™s songs (yeah, that is the official video). I dislike it when itโ€™s used to conceal an atrocious singer. I can hear autotune use when Iโ€™ve been told itโ€™s not possible that I could do so, despite it being quite easy for anyone who has any sort of musical training.

This article I also linked to on my other blog is good, but this bit is a complete exaggeration.

When we asked him to provide a simple explanation of what happens, computationally, when a voice signal enters his software, he opened his desk and pulled out thick stacks of folders, each stuffed with hundreds of pages of mathematical equations.

โ€œIn my mind itโ€™s not very complex,โ€ he says, sheepishly, โ€œbut I havenโ€™t yet found anyone I can explain it to who understands it. I usually just say, โ€˜Itโ€™s magic.โ€™โ€

The math is actually not that hard. I understand most of it conceptually and Iโ€™m completely terrible at anything in the mathematical realm. Combination of journalistic non-understanding and reputation-burnishing, I suspect.

Itโ€™s pretty standard signal processing. The innovation was applying it to voice, and especially doing it in a computationally cheap way.

And, just as importantly, the product having a good GUI interface. If a Linux person had designed this (or a Mozilla developer), no one wouldโ€™ve ever used it.

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