Celemony says no AI just real players in a plugin

Celemony just dropped a plugin that basically steals pro musicians' souls for your tracks. Their new tool, Tonalic, adapts perfect studio performances from over thirty top session players to fit any song's chords and tempo. It uses the Melodyne engine without AI or loops, turning recorded takes into flexible musical parts for guitar, bass, and drums.

The system works with small icons called Tonalics that represent musical patterns. You drag these regions onto a track as instructions, not audio or MIDI. The engine then pulls suitable passages from its library, adapting them dynamically to follow your song's harmony and groove automatically.

Featured musicians include legends like guitarist Brent Mason, drummer Kenny Aronoff, and bassist Nate Mendel from Foo Fighters. Performances were recorded in major genre-specific studios worldwide. The library offers thousands of patterns and continues growing.

Tonalic comes in two editions with identical content but different controls. The Arranger version handles the automatic adaptation. The Studio edition allows deeper editing of individual notes and overall sound. Both integrate as software instruments into most digital audio workstations.

The plugin is available through subscription or a prepaid license. Pricing starts under fifteen dollars monthly for the Arranger tier. The Studio version costs roughly twenty-five dollars per month. A promotional rate exists for new users.
 

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