Record In-Browser
Captures up to 30 seconds of microphone audio with one click — works on desktop and mobile.
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VOICE PITCH ANALYZER
Hold a sustained note or sing a phrase, then stop the recording — we'll analyze the captured audio and report the dominant pitch, scale and Camelot code.
VOICE PITCH ANALYZER
Whether warming up, scouting cover keys or training intonation, our Voice Pitch Analyzer captures a short take and tells you the musical pitch you sang — privately, in your browser.
Overview
Click record, sing or hum a note, then stop. The clip is analyzed on-device to extract the dominant pitch as a 12-TET note plus its scale.
Workflow
Capture your lowest comfortable note, then your highest. Compare the two readings to scout the keys that fit your voice.
Use Cases
Vocal coaches give objective feedback after a take, singers scout cover keys, karaoke fans pick songs that fit their voice, learners track progress over time.
Captures up to 30 seconds of microphone audio with one click — works on desktop and mobile.
Returns the dominant pitch (e.g. A) and the scale (major or minor) detected in your recording.
Adds a Camelot code so DJs and producers can pair vocal recordings with harmonic instrumentals.
Up to 30 seconds per take. For best results hold a single note steadily for 5–10 seconds.
No — recordings are kept in your browser memory. Audio is analyzed locally and discarded when you reset or close the page.
Yes. Free, unlimited and microphone-only — no signup needed.
We use a music-theory key model rather than raw frequency, so the result includes a tonal centre plus scale quality. This is more useful for choosing keys, transposing covers and pairing with backing tracks.
Yes — record yourself singing the chorus of a song, then use a Key Detector on the original track to compare the keys and pick a pitch-shift amount that fits your voice.
Your browser blocks the page from accessing your mic. Click the lock icon in the address bar and grant microphone permission.
Short or quiet recordings can produce ambiguous results. Sing or hum at a steady volume for at least 5 seconds.
Hit record, sing a note, then stop and analyze — your pitch reading shows up in seconds.
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