Chapter 1: introducing the atr-1a – Antares ATR-1a User Manual

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Chapter 1:
Introducing the ATR-1a

Some background

In 1997, Antares first introduced the ground-breaking Auto-Tune Pitch
Correcting Plug-In for ProTools™ (followed a bit later by the VST and
stand-alone versions). Here was a tool that actually corrected the pitch
of vocals and other solo instruments, in real time, without distortion or
artifacts, while preserving all of the expressive nuance of the original
performance. Recording Magazine called Auto-Tune a “Holy Grail of
recording.” And went on to say, “Bottom line, Auto-Tune is amazing...
Everyone with a Mac should have this program.” In fact, we know of
quite a few people who bought kilo-buck ProTools systems just to be
able to run Auto-Tune.

While Auto-Tune has met with tremendous success, we were immediately
barraged with requests for a self-contained “Auto-Tune-in-a-box.” The
result is the ATR-1a which you have presumably just purchased.

So what exactly is it?

The ATR-1a is a rack-mountable hardware implementation of Antares’s
Auto-Tune pitch correcting software. Like Auto-Tune, the ATR-1a employs
state-of-the-art digital signal processing algorithms (many, interestingly
enough, drawn from the geophysical industry) to continuously detect the
pitch of a periodic input signal (typically a solo voice or instrument) and
instantly and seamlessly change it to a desired pitch (defined by any of a
number of user-programmable scales).

In addition, the ATR-1a, befitting its easy portability, includes a number
of new features that make it particularly powerful in live performance
situations. These include a new Song Mode that lets the ATR-1a follow
even the most complex harmonic song structures, foot switch control of
Scale selection and Bypass Mode, as well as MIDI control of every ATR-1a
parameter.

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