John Mayer
Music Researcher & Audio Tools Specialist | Founder, OnlinePitchChanger.com
My name is John Mayer. I’ve spent the last five years researching music theory, digital audio processing, and the practical science of pitch — how it works in recorded audio, why changing it is technically more complex than most people realise, and how to do it properly without destroying sound quality.
OnlinePitchChanger.com exists because most free pitch changers online have the same problem: they give you a slider and a download button, with no explanation of what you are actually doing to the audio. No context for why ±4 semitones is a practical quality limit for vocals. No explanation of how pitch and tempo are decoupled in modern tools. No guidance on which settings make sense for which use cases. Just a result — useful or not, and often not.
I built this site to fix that. Every tool comes with a genuine explanation of what it does technically, what its limitations are, and how to use it to get the best possible result.
What I Research and Write About
My work on OnlinePitchChanger.com covers three areas:
Audio processing and pitch shifting. I research and explain the digital signal processing behind pitch changing — how phase vocoder algorithms decouple pitch from tempo, why large semitone shifts introduce artefacts, what “time-stretching” means in audio processing, and how different audio formats respond differently to pitch manipulation. The technical articles on this site are written so that someone without a DSP background can understand the principles well enough to make informed decisions about their audio.
Music theory for practical application. The educational content on this site covers semitones, musical keys, transposition, the relationship between pitch and key, how to find the right song key for a singer’s vocal range, and how pitch shifting relates to what professional producers do in a DAW. Theory is only useful when it connects to practice — that connection is what every article on this site is built around.
Singer vocal range research. OnlinePitchChanger.com also publishes documented vocal range analyses for well-known artists. These articles are relevant to the site’s core audience — singers who are changing pitch to match their range, or music fans curious about how their favourite artists’ voices compare. All singer range data is researched from multiple recorded sources and cross-referenced before publication. The full research methodology is explained in the Editorial Guidelines.
Why I Built These Tools
The frustration that built this site was specific: I kept needing to change the key of a song to match a singer’s range, and every free tool I found either produced poor-quality output or gave me no way to understand why.
Most pitch changers treat the user as someone who just wants a knob to turn. But understanding even the basics — that pitch and tempo are separate parameters, that semitone steps follow a consistent mathematical ratio, that different audio formats carry different frequency information — makes the difference between a result that sounds right and one that sounds like a broken tape deck.
Every tool on OnlinePitchChanger.com is built with that principle: combine the function with the explanation. Use it once and it works. Understand it and you use it better every time.
My Research and Accuracy Standards
Every page on this site is held to a consistent standard before publication:
- Technical explanations are grounded in established audio signal processing principles and music theory
- Singer vocal range data is cross-referenced from multiple recordings — not estimated, not copied from other sites
- Tool limitations are disclosed explicitly — I do not overstate what browser-based audio processing can do
- Educational articles cover the topic completely enough to be genuinely useful, not just long enough to appear comprehensive
- Where the research is uncertain or disputed, the article says so rather than presenting one figure as definitive fact
If you find an error anywhere on this site — a technical claim that does not hold up, a singer’s range listed incorrectly, a tool behaving unexpectedly — please report it via the Contact page. All correction requests are reviewed personally and applied promptly.
Tools on This Site
The eight tools on OnlinePitchChanger.com are built around the most common pitch-related tasks musicians, singers, and audio hobbyists face:
- MP3 Pitch Changer — upload an MP3, shift pitch by semitones, download the result
- Video Pitch Changer — change the audio pitch of a video file without re-encoding the video
- YouTube Pitch Changer — paste a YouTube URL and shift the pitch of the audio online
- Online Key Changer — transpose audio from one musical key to another
- Karaoke Pitch Changer — adjust karaoke tracks to suit your vocal range
- Pitch and Tempo Changer — change pitch and playback speed independently of each other
- Vocal Pitch Changer — shift the pitch of vocals in a recorded audio file
- Semitone Calculator — calculate the semitone distance between any two musical keys
Uploaded audio files are processed for the purpose of applying your chosen pitch and tempo changes. Files are not permanently stored. Full details are in the Privacy Policy and Data Security pages.
Get in Touch
Questions, corrections, and feedback are always welcome. All messages are read and responded to personally.
Contact: onlinepitchchanger.com/contact
How the tools work: onlinepitchchanger.com/how-it-works
Editorial standards: onlinepitchchanger.com/editorial-guidelines
Data handling: onlinepitchchanger.com/data-security
John Mayer is the founder and sole author of OnlinePitchChanger.com. All tool pages, educational articles, singer range analyses, and supporting content on this site are written and maintained by him. Last updated: June 2026.
