Magix Vocoder Effects Link

If you are using a dedicated Vocoder VST plugin (like TAL-Vocoder, Vocodex, or the native eFX Vocoder in Samplitude/Music Maker Premium), you must manually link the tracks.

Users often search for a "link" because the Vocoder can be tricky to set up. Unlike a standard reverb or delay, a vocoder requires two separate audio sources to work. In Magix Music Maker and Samplitude, here is how the linking process works: magix vocoder effects link

Just finding the link isn't enough; you need to tweak it to make it musical. If you are using a dedicated Vocoder VST

Traditional vocoding requires three components: a modulator (typically a voice or rhythmic audio), a carrier (a synthesizer pad or noise source), and a bank of bandpass filters that analyze the modulator’s spectral envelope and impose it onto the carrier. In many DAWs, setting this up involves complex auxiliary sends and sidechain routing. MAGIX simplifies this via an Effects Link – a dedicated routing matrix that directly connects a vocoder instance to an audio track’s input and sidechain without manual bus configuration. MAGIX allows you to link stereo carriers

Many MAGIX users prefer this free VST because it mimics the classic Roland VP-330.


MAGIX allows you to link stereo carriers. Try linking your vocoder to a stereo pad that pans left and right. Then, speak a mono vocal. The result is a massive, swirling robotic choir that fills the stereo field.