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Pro version 4 or later [22] Project version 3.6.0.5 / Pro version 4.5.0.5 or later [23] RePitch Synchro Arts N/A Version 1 Revoice Pro Synchro Arts N/A Version 4 or later [24] [4] SpectraLayers: Steinberg: N/A Version 6 or later [25] WaveLab: Steinberg: Auto-Align Post 2 Sound Radix N/A Version 1 Acoustica: Acon Digital N/A Version 7.4 or later ...
In 2006, the VST interface specification was updated to version 2.4. Changes included the ability to process audio with 64-bit precision. [6] A free-software replacement was developed for LMMS that would be used later by other free-software projects. [7] [8] VST 3.0 came out in 2008. Changes included: [9] Audio Inputs for VST Instruments
LV2 (LADSPA Version 2) is a set of royalty-free open standards [2] for music production plug-ins and matching host applications. It includes support for the synthesis and processing of digital audio and CV, [3] events such as MIDI and OSC, and provides a free alternative to audio plug-in standards such as Virtual Studio Technology (VST) and Audio Units (AU).
Celemony Software GmbH is a German musical software company that specializes in digital audio pitch correction software. It produces Melodyne, a popular audio pitch modification tool similar to Auto-Tune , although the program itself is manual tuning software.
VST for Windows also supported Active Movie compatible plug-ins. Cubase Audio VST 3.5 + Wavelab 1.6 + Waves AudioTrack was bundled in the first "Producer Pac". This version is native Windows 95 code + is the first version of Cubase for Windows that is incompatible with Windows 3.11. Cubase VST 3.5.5 for Windows 95: 1998
Auto-Tune is audio processor software released on September 19, 1997, by the American company Antares Audio Technologies. [1] [4] It uses a proprietary device to measure and correct pitch in music. [5] It operates on different principles from the vocoder or talk box and produces different results. [6]
Hosted by Propellerhead Software, developers are free to use their own DSP and existing code to develop instruments and effects for use in Reason. When purchased, the Rack Extensions appear in Reason as a native Reason instrument or effect module and are privy to all of the features that Reason offers in its native instruments and effect devices.
The program used to dynamically load audio plug-ins is called a plug-in host. Example hosts include Bidule, Gig Performer, Mainstage, REAPER, and Sonic Visualiser.Plug-ins can also be used to host other plug-ins. [4] Communication between host and plug-in(s) is determined by a plug-in application programming interface ().