What if I don't have a file?
If the track is already playing from YouTube or another streaming source, use the Pitch Changer extension instead.
Up 1 semitone
Use the Pitch Changer extension for live key changes while the track is already running.
If the track is already playing from YouTube or another streaming source, use the Pitch Changer extension instead.
Add a local file, choose a preset or semitone value, and let the tool prepare the new version. A negative value lowers the key, and a positive value raises it.
No. This tool keeps the playback speed and overall tempo steady while changing the key, so you can judge the new pitch without the song sounding sped up or slowed down.
If you are unsure, start with down 1 semitone for a subtle test, down 2 semitones for a major-second change, and down 3 semitones if the song still feels clearly too high.
Yes. This tool handles the file locally on your device, so it never needs to be uploaded to a server.
The download button exports a WAV result generated locally after the selected change is processed.
It opens with the slider already set to +1 semitone, so you can hear up 1 semitone right away.
Use it when a video feels better up and you want a clear starting point before adjusting the slider manually.
If this move feels close but not final, compare it with up 2 semitones or head back to the broader Video Pitch Changer guide for manual fine-tuning.
It gives you a focused starting point inside Video Pitch Changer instead of making you dial in the same move from scratch every time.
Keep this quick reference in mind when you are testing a new key. It covers what pitch shifting changes, where musicians use it most often, and how common semitone values line up with interval names.
Pitch shifting moves the musical key up or down. Negative semitone values lower the pitch, positive values raise it, and the amount tells you how far you are moving from the original key.
Musicians often talk about a major second, minor third, fifth, or octave instead of raw numbers. Seeing both labels together makes it easier to move between rehearsal language and slider values.
Small moves help with comfort checks and fine adjustments. Larger moves can change the energy, range, and overall character of the song more noticeably, so comparison listening matters.
These are the pitch moves musicians reach for most often when they are comparing nearby keys or testing a clear transposition idea.
| Amount | Interval | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Down by 1 semitone | Minor second down | Small comfort check when the current key already feels close. |
| Down by 2 semitones | Major second down | Classic major-second comparison for a nearby alternative. |
| Down by 3 semitones | Minor third down | Common rehearsal move when you need a friendlier range. |
| Down by 4 semitones | Major third down | Stronger reset when the first nearby key still feels off. |
| Down by 5 semitones | Perfect fourth down | Bold transposition test without jumping all the way to an octave. |
| Down by 6 semitones | Tritone down | Dramatic midpoint shift when you want a clearly different feel. |
| Down by 7 semitones | Perfect fifth down | Big rearrangement check with a noticeably different center. |
| Down by 8 semitones | Minor sixth down | Large range move for a clearly lower or higher version. |
| Down by 9 semitones | Major sixth down | Wide comparison when you need more than a nearby adjustment. |
| Down by 10 semitones | Minor seventh down | Strong alternate-key check for a very different result. |
| Down by 11 semitones | Major seventh down | Near-octave reset when the first pass still misses. |
| Down by 12 semitones | One octave down | Full octave move for extreme range checks or transformed references. |
| Up by 1 semitone | Minor second up | Small comfort check when the current key already feels close. |
| Up by 2 semitones | Major second up | Classic major-second comparison for a nearby alternative. |
| Up by 3 semitones | Minor third up | Common rehearsal move when you need a friendlier range. |
| Up by 4 semitones | Major third up | Stronger reset when the first nearby key still feels off. |
| Up by 5 semitones | Perfect fourth up | Bold transposition test without jumping all the way to an octave. |
| Up by 6 semitones | Tritone up | Dramatic midpoint shift when you want a clearly different feel. |
| Up by 7 semitones | Perfect fifth up | Big rearrangement check with a noticeably different center. |
| Up by 8 semitones | Minor sixth up | Large range move for a clearly lower or higher version. |
| Up by 9 semitones | Major sixth up | Wide comparison when you need more than a nearby adjustment. |
| Up by 10 semitones | Minor seventh up | Strong alternate-key check for a very different result. |
| Up by 11 semitones | Major seventh up | Near-octave reset when the first pass still misses. |
| Up by 12 semitones | One octave up | Full octave move for extreme range checks or transformed references. |
Preset for raising a video by 12 semitones.
Preset for raising a video by 2 semitones.
Preset for moving music up a minor second.
Preset for moving a song up a minor second.
Preset for moving an instrumental up a minor second.
Preset for lowering a video by 1 semitone.
Change audio pitch with semitone presets and nearby comparisons.
Change the pitch of an MP3 with preset shortcuts and manual semitone control.
Local music tools for changing key, changing speed while keeping pitch steady, keeping practice tempo steady, and sounding clear reference pitches.