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Voice Effects

2021-07-15
2021-07-18
  • Jonas Barbosa

    Jonas Barbosa - 2021-07-15

    There is a way to add voice effects to my microphone through equalizer apo?

     
  • Peter Verbeek

    Peter Verbeek - 2021-07-15

    Depends on the effect you want. By default your can equalize your microphone. But things as reverbs need a VST plugin. Note that not all plugins work on Equalizer APO. Usually it's a matter of trying a free one to see if it works.

     
    • Jonas Barbosa

      Jonas Barbosa - 2021-07-15

      I want effects to change the voice, to make the voice robotic for example.

       
      • Peter Verbeek

        Peter Verbeek - 2021-07-15

        Oke, that's in the realm of VST plugins. Equalizing the mic isn't good enough for a robot-like sound or any other of such effects.

         
        • Jonas Barbosa

          Jonas Barbosa - 2021-07-15

          Do you know how I could do it with VST plugin? I already use it with reafir to reduce noise.

           
          • Peter Verbeek

            Peter Verbeek - 2021-07-15

            Unfortunately, I don't know of such plugins. Usually they are not free of charge.

            If you already use a noise reduction plugin then it's a matter of adding an effects plugin before or after it. I guess you have also added a microphone selection device command above the Reafir plugin. This ensures that only the mic is effected.

             
          • Juha

            Juha - 2021-07-15

            Have you tried find/create IR files and use build-in convolution engine? Maybe here's one (ROBOTVERB-1) of those listed (sorry but I can't say how it sounds because of I'm on Linux).

            My guess is that plug-ins like Vocoders don't work properly in EqualizerAPO but, you could try save plug-in chunk data using method which was described here discussions few year ago https://sourceforge.net/p/equalizerapo/discussion/general/thread/be274c4f/#c872

             
            • Jonas Barbosa

              Jonas Barbosa - 2021-07-18

              It is an option. I will try it, but considering I'm not a advanced user, I don't know if I will be able to do.

               
              • Peter Verbeek

                Peter Verbeek - 2021-07-18

                It's fairly easy to try. In the Configuration Editor click on the green + button, select the Convolution command in the Advanced filters menu. Then select the impulse response file which is basically a wave file (.wav extension) you downloaded somewhere from the internet. There's only one thing to consider. The bit depth and sample frequency of such a file should be the same as the set bit depth and sample frequency for the audio device. Usually devices on Windows are set to 24 bit, 48 kHz (which is DVD quality).

                 

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