Use the Pitch Correction effect’s “normal” and “low” buttons to determine the pitch range that you want to scan for notes that need correction. Normal is the default range and works for most audio material. Low should be used only for audio material that contains extremely low frequencies (below 100 Hz), which may result in inaccurate pitch detection. These parameters have no effect on the sound; they are simply optimized tracking options for the chosen target pitch range.
The Scale pop-up menu allows you to choose different pitch quantization grids. The default setting is the chromatic scale.
The user scale is the scale that is set manually with the onscreen keyboard in the plug-in window. If you’re unsure of the intervals used in any given scale, choose it from the Scale pop-up menu and look at the onscreen keyboard. You can alter any note in the chosen scale by clicking the keyboard keys. Any such adjustments overwrite the existing user scale settings.
There is only one user scale per project. You can, however, create multiple user scales and save them as Pitch Correction plug-in settings files.
Tip: The drone scale uses a fifth as a quantization grid, and the single scale defines a single note. Neither of these scales is meant to result in realistic singing voices, but you should try them if aiming for interesting effects.
Choose the root note of the scale from the Root pop-up menu. You can freely transpose the major and minor scales and scales named after chords.
Note: If you choose user “scale” or “chromatic” from the Scale pop-up menu, the Root pop-up menu entries are dimmed.