Re: [linux-audio-user] Vocals

From: chaz kiser <chazkiser@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Mon Oct 30 2006 - 07:04:33 EET

Rob wrote:

>On Sunday 29 October 2006 22:23, chaz kiser wrote:
>
>
>>Any suggestions what plugins or effects in Audacity I could
>>utilize to make my vocals sound better, or more importantly,
>>like someone else?
>>
>>
>
>I'm no recording engineer, but I've worked with one in the last
>few years and I think I have a little bit of understanding of
>what sounds good and what doesn't now.
>
>First of all, I assume you're not trying to record your vocals on
>a $5 microphone that came with your computer and that you're
>recording somewhere that doesn't have awful acoustics. I've
>recorded in a closet, in a car, under a blanket and a number of
>other ways due to being unable to just put up acoustic foam in
>the apartments I've lived in. I also learned that all the
>cliches about "sing from the diaphragm", "don't swallow the
>mic", etc. are pretty much true, at least if you're trying to
>record something that sounds like popular music.
>
>After you're done recording, conventional approaches to fixing
>vocals include compression and EQ, various "aural exciters",
>which range from expensive snake oil to useful, and nowadays
>pitch correction (like Antares Autotune) especially. I don't
>think there's a way to automatically correct sharp or flat
>vocals in Audacity though (yet.)
>
>I used something a lot cheaper than Autotune back in my Windows
>days, but can't remember what it was called and I don't know
>whether there are any Autotune clones that would work under
>Linux. But you should be able to fix especially out-of-tune
>notes by either punching in from another recording (which I
>usually do) or selecting just that note and manually shifting
>the pitch through one of Audacity's time/pitch plugins.
>
>A common mistake (or artistic decision I would disagree with)
>that I hear in people's stuff that they post to the net is
>leaving the vocals too dry when the whole rest of the track has
>a ton of effects. Doubling the vocal track (recording it a
>second time in unison) or using chorus or delay, and then
>applying a reverb sound that's appropriate to the rest of the
>track, will usually help. Use your discretion.... if it's a
>really electronic sounding track, you can take a lot more
>liberties (flange, gate, phaser, vocoder...) than if you're
>recording a "folk singer/songwriter" kind of track, but I think
>there aren't a lot of situations where you want to leave the
>vocal track totally dry.
>
>Finally, people who aren't confident in their own vocal ability
>and who mix their own music tend to mix themselves way too far
>back, even when the vocal or lyrics is what they want you to
>notice. I personally think it's better to have the vocal
>overcooked than inaudible.
>
>As far as making yourself sound like someone else.... you can try
>tricks like slowing down your track, recording your vocals and
>speeding it back up (or vice versa), you can try analyzing the
>spectrum of the person you want to imitate's vocals and EQ'ing
>yourself to sound like him or her, but in the end there's more
>to someone's voice than just the timbre.
>
>There are articles about how to record better sounding vocals in
>the musician magazines almost every month, and I'm sure there
>are hundreds of them around the net, but these are my opinions.
>
>Rob
>
>
>
As far as not sounding like myself, its kind of a strange situation.
I'm a good singer. I'd rather sound like me. But its a political
commercial I'm recording and I sound just like the candidate. Its kind
of cheesy for a candidate to sing commercials how great he is. lol.

chaz
Received on Mon Oct 30 08:15:04 2006

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