
The plugin is available for both 32 and 64-bit AAX Native, AAX AudioSuite, VST, and Audio Units (AU). Supported sample rates are 44.1 kHz to 192 kHz. I’ve even used this plugin for some music tracks when I wanted to get a lo-fi effect and it worked well. The mix is a great way to create instant vocal harmonies if that’s your aim while the Robot mode fixes onto a pitch and allows you to create some convincing robot sounds. Select your mode, alter the pitch, increase or decrease the drive (if you want) and select the mix. The beautiful thing about this plugin is it’s very simple to use. The three modes are Transpose, Quantise and Robot. The user interface has three modules: Pitch/Formant, Mode and Drive/Mix.

I’ve not tried and tested this yet, but hope to soon.

The unit also allows you to control the melody of a persons voice using a midi controller keyboard.

The plugin does many things and the company state it is a tool for dramatic voice alteration and can change the pitch of your voice including changing the gender with formant shifting. This was exactly what this plugin allowed me to do. Therefore I like easy to use software that requires no reading of a manual and just works. I am plug and play person who likes to switch something on and just use it. Now, I’m not really a tech head, or someone who gets their head stuck into specifications and how things work. To my delight I stumbled across Little AlterBoy by Soundtoys. Not having anything other than a vocoder (and that’s been overused to create such sounds) I went online. So I was recently working on some robot sound effects and needed a good voice changing tool. While no longer available, it was one of those plugins that allowed you to just whack a standard sound into it, mash it up and it spat out something amazing. A few years ago I got to review a fantastic little plugin called the Sound Effects Machine.

Every now and then a plugin comes along that makes working on a project that much easier.
