Waves Tune Real Time Tutorial -
| Problem | Likely Fix | |---------|-------------| | Warbling / tremolo | Increase or Tolerance | | Not enough correction | Lower Tolerance to 10–20 | | Robotic but you don’t want it | Raise Speed to 70+ | | No correction at all | Check Key/Scale matches song; ensure Correction not at 0% | | Latency too high | Lower DAW buffer size; disable other latency-heavy plugins on the track |
Waves Tune Real-Time isn't just for vocals. It works excellently on monophonic instrument tracks—lead guitar, bass guitar, monophonic synthesizers, and fretless instruments.
Most of Waves Tune Real-Time's character comes from two primary parameters: and Note Transition . waves tune real time tutorial
⚠️ Do not use after time-based effects (reverb, delay) – correction artifacts will be multiplied.
Before you hit a single note, you need to configure your DAW correctly. Waves Tune Real Time (WTRT) requires specific buffer settings to function without making you sound like a robot stuck in a garbage disposal. | Problem | Likely Fix | |---------|-------------| |
Waves Tune Real-Time runs natively in AAX, AU, and VST hosts, making it compatible with all major DAWs including Ableton Live, Logic Pro, Cubase, Pro Tools, Reaper, and Studio One. For live applications, it also runs in any live mixing console via MultiRack SoundGrid.
If you want the hard-tune effect:
Optimized for live performances and real-time studio tracking.
: While Speed controls the correction of a sustained note, Note Transition determines how fast the correction moves from one note to the next. A fast Note Transition (low value) can make pitch changes sound jumpy and quantized—perfect for a robotic effect. A slower Note Transition (higher value) provides smoother transitions, preserving the natural glide and expression between notes. ⚠️ Do not use after time-based effects (reverb,