how to make note speeds the same?

ofekchen6

New member
i have recorded a sample and i want to play it on multipile notes the same time (like a choir).

the problem is that the higher notes go faster than the lower ones.

is there any way to make all the notes play at same speed?

i am currently working with fl studio, but iv'e been told that it is not able to do that, do you know any daw that is able to do that?

thank you :)
 
Whoever told ya that didn't read the manual or do research.
Slicex and the playlist can do that. fl slicer and edison too.

Most daws have this feature by default, timestretching and audiobending.
 
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Whoever told ya that didn't read the manual or do research.
Slicex and the playlist can do that. fl slicer and edison too.

Most daws have this feature by default, timestretching and audiobending.

thank you, can you explain how do i do that? or do you know a video showing it?
 
Wrench icon in slicex and edison but I think fl slicer does that automatically.
What you're asking is simply the matter of stretching the same thing for each pitch intended.
And that is part of granular/graintable synthesis.
 
Wrench icon in slicex and edison but I think fl slicer does that automatically.
What you're asking is simply the matter of stretching the same thing for each pitch intended.
And that is part of granular/graintable synthesis.

somewhy i'm not able to do that, probably haven't figured out yet... i'll check it again tomorrow. if you have a video showing how to do so or you know another program that does this, please tell me :)
 
There's also the classic timestretch-less method of simply looping the sustained part of the sample. This way you can get them going forever, if needed. That's what everyone did for sustained samples back in the day; realtime timestretch is a relatively "new" thing (ok, so it's been around for a decade or so, but anyway...).
 
slicex is one of the most advanced sampling tools that exist.
The wrench icon's in the main area in the little image bubbles if those are still there.

Thank yous so much! you helped me find the answer!!!
the way to do that is to use newtone (i'll post a link to the video in the next comment)
you don't know how much you just helped me right now :)
 
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