Izotope Stutter Edit

broken image


  1. Izotope Stutter Edit
  2. Izotope Stutter Free

Izotope Stutter Edit

Stutters, sweeps and trills which would usually require a large amount of tinkering with multiple plug-ins have been brought under one simple umbrella in the. System Requirements. Icollections 3 7. Stutter Edit runs on Windows XP, x64, Vista, 7 and Mac OS 10.5.8 (Leopard) or later. It also requires host software capable of running VST, AU or RTAS plug‑ins. Note that as Stutter Edit requires MIDI input from the host software, some DAWs are not supported.

The Stutter module in Stutter Edit 2

Edit

The Stutter module controls the note values Stutter Edit 2 uses to create rhythmic edits. Rate allows you to set the speed at which your stutter pattern slides from the beginning to the end of your configured range, as defined by the blue Range control. The wider you set your Range, the more rhythmic variation you will hear in the stutter effect. From there, you have a few more options for creating a stutter.

Izotope Stutter Free

Do you want a smooth stutter effect or a choppier, 'gridded' feel? With the Quantize mode off, Stutter Edit 2 moves smoothly from the lowest to highest note values set by the Rate parameters. For example, if you choose 1/8 for the bottom of the range, and 1/128 for the top of the range, the Stutter's length will slide between those two note values.

If Quantize is on, the plug-in will 'lock' onto different rhythmic values as Stutter Edit 2 moves through the Rate control timeline, in accordance with the Mode and Step parameters.

Step determines how long Stutter Edit 2 stays on each of the Rate note values while moving through the timeline. After selecting note intervals in the Rate parameter, Mode affects how the selected notes are played, and the order in which they're played. The Mode menu offers a number of choices to change the manner of Stutter's performance:

  • Free ignores note values, instead holding whatever stutter length is closest to the progress of the curve. This can produce more jarring, atonal effects.
  • Closest steps only among the values in the Rate parameter.
  • Walk moves through the Rate parameter note values by moving up one note with each new step.
  • Skip moves through Rate parameter note values in a pattern: up two notes, then down one note (or down two notes, up one note, depending on the curve direction in the TVM).
  • Stagger moves through Rate parameter note values in a pattern dependent upon the curve direction in the TVM, or Time-Variant Modifiers—see the screenshot below.
  • Random moves erratically through the Rate parameter values.




broken image