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Pitch Perfect Karaoke

BuffJoe writes "The folks paid to make newer and improved karaoke machines have discovered a way to make even the most tone deaf singers sound great with a new technology for perfect-pitch karaoke!" Make your cracks about Karaoke if you like, but read the article- there are hooks for scoring singing, correcting pitch, and more. Should also make those Karaoke parties a little more tolerable.

4 of 199 comments (clear)

  1. Wow! Imagine the future! by Kraegar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Early versions will adjust the pitch, future versions will go beyond that! Just think, someday I can "sing" the words along with the music, and due to their nifty software it will sound exactly as if I had the CD in.... Wait, if it sounds the same, why not just put in the CD? Doesn't this whole thing take some of the point out of it? I mean, bad singing included, that's the fun of Karaoke... laughing at people who try to sing along but suck...

  2. Two turntables and a pitch correcting microphone by Tomy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    We're close to having technology so good that it will require no talent whatsoever in order for people to make music. Just go out in the street and find attractive people to dance around and pose as singers.


    Wait, this has already happened.

  3. What's the point? by Vic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Half the reason for going to Karaoke is laughing at how bad your friends and other bar patrons are at singing. If it corrects this for you, ya might as well just play the jukebox and lip-sync...

    -vic

  4. Don't leave your earplugs yet... by daoine · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It doesn't quite have the full effect as one might be lead to believe. Looks like they've got tempo adjustments, which is good for the speed demons; and key calibration (which is nice, letting all those altos sing Diana Ross now) but they're basically adjusting the music coming out, rather than the vocal input.

    Thus, bad karaoke is still bad karaoke. Good for all of us with pitch, we'll still impress. :)

    Adjusting the voice on the fly is going to be a different problem -- it would probably be easiest solved by hard coding the Hz at each given moment of a song (with some fuzzy boundaries) and then running the mic input through.

    But what fun is that? How can we be impressed by the guys who can sing A-Ha's 'Take on Me' if everyone can do it?