Complete software
Waves Torque is a tonal processing plug-in dedicated to tuning and setting drum sounds in a mix. It allows you to correct drum shells recorded slightly too high or too low, align the pitch of a snare with the key of the track, or bring more coherence between multiple takes (multi-mics, overdubs, loops). The result: a drum kit that "speaks" better in the production, more stable, more professional, without losing the acoustic energy.
Unlike a general pitch shifter, Torque is designed to respect what makes a drum shell impactful: attack, resonance, and duration. Its approach using Organic ReSynthesis aims to preserve the natural character of the drum while allowing credible changes in pitch and body sensation (tone/formants) within a mixing context.
The core of the plug-in is a large Torque control to adjust pitch. Then set Thresh to define the level at which processing applies, and adjust responsiveness with Speed (attack and release) to best follow hits and avoid unwanted effects. Finally, Trim allows thickening or thinning the sound to get a "fatter" snare, fuller toms, or a better-sitting kick.
Going beyond simple pitch adjustment, Focus helps identify the most relevant fundamental frequency zone to tune. You can scan frequencies, listen to isolated zones, and rely on the visualizer to quickly spot where the drum "really sings." This is especially useful on complex tracks, microphones with bleed, or loops where you want to concentrate tonal changes on a specific band.
In sound reinforcement, a poorly tuned drum kit can ruin the mix balance. Torque offers a direct solution: real-time tuning of a snare that's too high, stabilizing uneven toms, or restoring tonal coherence to the kit without heavy solutions like sound replacement. Zero latency and live optimization allow quick corrections, even mid-concert.
Torque is not just a corrective tool: automating the main control opens the door to glissando effects, expressive pitch variations, and more "melodic" percussive textures. On congas, timbales, tambourines, maracas, or orchestral percussion, you can create pitch movements that fit the arrangement while preserving rhythmic identity.