
That said, I don't know its ease of use when it comes to fixing small variations I just haven't used it for that reason, but it's probably not hard either.ģ) Waves Tune is just as easy to use as Melodyne, except for the fact that the UI isn't as good. It's just the best UI, with intuitive use and keyboard shortcuts, not to mention an easily maximizable screen.

It definitely has the coolest sound, which I use for pop songs because you can just up a vocal an octave or two to provide a female vocal sound to backup your main vocal. I find it works best for either using it live which is its main point, or fixing small variations in tone.Ģ) Melodyne is arguably the best when it comes to manually fixing notes, as well as making you sound like T-Pain if you so choose.

I'm honestly not sure what anyone's talking about.ġ) Waves Tune Real-Time does not make you sound like T-Pain, so whoever said that just doesn't know how to use it. Do this for even just a week, and you’ll not only be a better singer, but you’ll also improve your pitch perception skills. Hit whichever C you’re most comfortable with, try to match it with your voice, and keep hitting C and adjusting your voice until you hit it. Just cover one octave on a keyboard, C to C. As such, if you really care about music, then you’ll train your singing skills.


You don’t know what notes fit and don’t fit in context, so you can’t sing it, nor manually correct. Read your comments on not being able to pitch correct manually- that’s because you don’t have developed pitch perception. So you either get better at manual editing and pitch correction, doing syllable by syllable if you have to, OR, you practice singing to get better at hitting notes. The weakness here is that you’re too off, and it takes a lot of manual labor to fix that. The better you can hit notes, the easier it’ll be to make things sound natural.
