Resample an audio file in order to change its pitch
zita-retune <options> <input file> <output file>.
zita-retune resamples an audio file by a the inverse of a ratio expressed in cents, without changing the nominal sample rate.
The result is to change the musical pitch and length of the file. Input can be any audio file readable by the libsndfile library. The output file type is either WAV or CAF.
--help
Display a short help text.
--cent pitch change in cents
The number of cents by which the pitch is changed. The accepted range is +/- 1200 cents, the useful range in practice will be something like +/- 100 cents.
--wav
Produce a WAV file, or for more than 2 channels, a WAVEX file. This is the default.
--amb
Produce a WAVEX file with the Ambisonic GUID. Such files should have the .amb filename extension.
--caf
Produce a Core Audio file.
--16bit
Output sample format is signed 16-bit. This option also enables the use of dithering, described below.
--24bit
Output sample format is 24-bit. This is the default.
--float
Output sample format is 32-bit floating point.
--rec
Add white dithering noise with a rectangular distribution. This is the best option if the output data is going to processed again, but in that case it would be advisable to use 24-bit or float.
--tri
Add filtered noise with a triangular distribution. Compared to the rectangular dither this reduces the noise density in the lower frequency range.
--lips
This uses the optimal error feedback filter described by Stanley Lipschitz. This is recommended is the output is the final distribution format, e.g. for a CD.
--pad
Insert zero valued input samples at the start and end so that the output includes the full symmetric filter response even for the first and last samples.
Zero in case there are no errors, non-zero otherwise.
Some examples of dithering are available here: http://www.kokkinizita.net/linuxaudio/dithering.html
zita-retune was written by Fons Adriaensen <[email protected]>.
This manual page was written by Jaromír Mikeš <[email protected]> for the Debian project (but may be used by others).