They lack deep controls but have been fine-tuned to get quick, good-sounding results. To round things off, there are five effects at the bottom that run in series called Distort, Filter, Transform (with eight convolution speaker models), Shred (a stutter effect), and Delay. Alternatively, Madrona Labs’ Virta ($89) is a more complex and flexible synth that can be controlled by your voice, but it lacks the retro vocal FX sounds found in VocalSynth. However, for high-quality vocoding, you could check out MeldaProduction’s MVocoder (€49), or for Compuvox effects there’s Sonic Charge’s Bitspeek ($33). There’s not really anything out there that has all of these FX in one plug-in. Special mention should go to the specially-crafted dial called Bats, which makes any signal sound like a gravelly Christian Bale! At the top of the GUI you also have volume and dry/wet controls, plus a flexible X/Y pad that allows you assign parameters from a long list to each axis. On top of the waveform selection, each engine gives you fairly limited control over three main parameters for things such as formant, drive and bit reduction, plus a type-selector switch with three settings. The input can also pass through a Pitch Correction module to tidy tuning or create hard-tuning effects, with the ability to constrain to a key.
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