While Auto-Tune 5 and 6 introduced graphical pitch editing, version 7 refined it into a workable daily driver. Unlike the real-time "Auto Mode" (famous for the T-Pain effect), Auto-Tune 7’s Graphical Mode allowed producers to see the actual pitch contour of an audio file overlaid on a piano roll.
For Mac OS X users in the early 2010s, this was revolutionary. You could manually drag sour notes into place without affecting the vocalist’s natural vibrato or phrasing. This "surgical" approach became the gold standard for pop, country, and rock. Antares Autotune 7 Mac Os X
Auto-Tune 7 was released in 2009 and supported up until OS X 10.11 El Capitan. However, the "sweet spot" versions are: While Auto-Tune 5 and 6 introduced graphical pitch
Warning: Mac OS X 10.15 (Catalina) and later dropped 32-bit support entirely. Auto-Tune 7 is a 32-bit plugin. It will not work on Catalina, Big Sur, Monterey, or newer. Warning: Mac OS X 10
Modern singers often have weak vibrato. Auto-Tune 7’s "Create Vibrato" option (found in the Pitch Graph dropdown) allows you to add synthetic, mathematically perfect vibrato. Set depth to 30, rate to 5.5. Apply it only to sustained notes.