

To determine whether a wave file has tempo embedded, open the sampler channel properties and right click on the wave display. That will disappear when the knob is Reset. You can see in this screenshot of the "horn 1" channel that it is not Reset, because there is a tiny bit of orange showing on the dial below the knob. You will fine the Time knob in the Sampler channel settings. Here is an illustration of how to Reset the Time knob, how to determine if a wave file has embedded tempo and how to change the Note fine pitch in Slicex But I would suggest not using a beta for any serious work. I used FL 12 beta to make this, just to be sure there wasn't something about FL 12 that was the problem. If you switch to pattern mode and go to pattern 3, you can hear and see more exaggerated note pitch changes. I added the patterns to the playlist, so you can just press play and listen.

Pattern 2 is unchanged so you can hear the difference. I have changed the pitch of a couple of the notes in the piano roll of pattern 1 using the method above. I have attached an flp with a vocal sample loaded into a Slicex channel. You can look at the hint bar while moving them to be more accurate (100 cents = one semitone). That changes the velocity sliders to pitch sliders. Double clicking a note to open the note properties to change the pitch, is the same as right clicking on the lower left of the piano roll > Note fine pitch. But if you have it set to Resample and the Time knob all the way to the left, you should be able to change the Pitch in the piano roll.īut as I said, you can also change the pitch in the Slicex channel. FL 12 reacts a bit differently in the time stretching area and the options have different names. unless you have set the Time stretching to something other than Resample and/or moved the Time knob. And you should be able to change the pitch of any sample loaded into a sampler channel.

You should be able to change the pitch of the sliced audio in the Slicex piano roll in either of the ways you mentioned.
