octavedown
Octavedown is the process of lowering an audio signal's pitch by one octave, effectively halving its frequency. In practice the result is a sound that is twice as low as the original, often used to produce a sub-bass octave or a fuller low end. In notation it corresponds to transposing down 12 semitones (−12) or using the designation ottava bassa in musical scores.
Two broad methods are used to achieve octavedown: digital pitch-shifting in software and hardware effects, and
Common in guitar and bass practice, octave-down pedals or synths are used to create bass lines from
Notationally, octavedown corresponds to ottava bassa in scores, or simply to a transposition of −12 semitones
Technical considerations include potential artifacts such as phasing, timing errors, or aliasing when processing polyphonic material;