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Best app to slow speed a song?

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Comments

  • That’s the best one on PC. I made many experimental tracks during my college days using that. :)

  • If anyone is still trying to simulate slowing down a record from 45 to 33.3, try lowering the speed to around 0.74 and lower the pitch by about 6 semitones, or 624 cents if you have that level of precision. For 33.3 going to 16, try lowering to 0.48 in speed and lower the pitch an octave, or 12 semitones plus 48 cents.
    I used AudioStretch and it sounded pretty good.

  • @jwmmakerofmusic said:
    That’s the best one on PC. I made many experimental tracks during my college days using that. :)

    >

    I visited a US college once, when I was involved with an American girl. Penn State. I remember the students being quite perturbed at me ‘jaywalking’ across an empty road. Different place, different rules. :)

  • @Zen210507 said:

    @jwmmakerofmusic said:
    That’s the best one on PC. I made many experimental tracks during my college days using that. :)

    >

    I visited a US college once, when I was involved with an American girl. Penn State. I remember the students being quite perturbed at me ‘jaywalking’ across an empty road. Different place, different rules. :)

    Was the street clear when you ‘jaywalked’? If the streets were clear, you wanted to cross without walking an extra 400 feet, and these students were on foot instead of in vehicle, they really should shut their gobs. There’s really no need for them to judge someone if someone isn’t causing any inconveniences nor problems.

    Man I’m glad I didn’t attend Penn State then. Most of the populous there sound very uptight, priggish, and unfriendly, you’re American girl notwithstanding of course. At my college, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, people seemed nicer. Of course you’ll always get a few derps, like this one stuck-up white girl who said I should “act white” when she heard me listening to old-skool hiphop on my headphones (for which I reported her unwarranted bigotry to the professor). However, most of UWM was cool and down-to-earth.

  • Will check these suggestions

  • @CracklePot said:
    If anyone is still trying to simulate slowing down a record from 45 to 33.3, try lowering the speed to around 0.74 and lower the pitch by about 6 semitones, or 624 cents if you have that level of precision. For 33.3 going to 16, try lowering to 0.48 in speed and lower the pitch an octave, or 12 semitones plus 48 cents.
    I used AudioStretch and it sounded pretty good.

    Thanks for this, just what I’m looking for. I’ll have a look at AudioStretch.

  • @CracklePot said:
    If anyone is still trying to simulate slowing down a record from 45 to 33.3, try lowering the speed to around 0.74 and lower the pitch by about 6 semitones, or 624 cents if you have that level of precision. For 33.3 going to 16, try lowering to 0.48 in speed and lower the pitch an octave, or 12 semitones plus 48 cents.
    I used AudioStretch and it sounded pretty good.

    Thanks for the info!

  • @supanorton said:

    @CracklePot said:
    If anyone is still trying to simulate slowing down a record from 45 to 33.3, try lowering the speed to around 0.74 and lower the pitch by about 6 semitones, or 624 cents if you have that level of precision. For 33.3 going to 16, try lowering to 0.48 in speed and lower the pitch an octave, or 12 semitones plus 48 cents.
    I used AudioStretch and it sounded pretty good.

    Thanks for this, just what I’m looking for. I’ll have a look at AudioStretch.

    Thank you again, @CracklePot. Your parameters got me very close. A little tweaking and perfect.

  • @supanorton said:

    @supanorton said:

    @CracklePot said:
    If anyone is still trying to simulate slowing down a record from 45 to 33.3, try lowering the speed to around 0.74 and lower the pitch by about 6 semitones, or 624 cents if you have that level of precision. For 33.3 going to 16, try lowering to 0.48 in speed and lower the pitch an octave, or 12 semitones plus 48 cents.
    I used AudioStretch and it sounded pretty good.

    Thanks for this, just what I’m looking for. I’ll have a look at AudioStretch.

    Thank you again, @CracklePot. Your parameters got me very close. A little tweaking and perfect.

    That is great to hear. Yes, tweak to taste. Honestly, I was pretty buzzed when I did the math, but it sounded right when I tried it. :*

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