how to you make that new shitty robot hip hop vocal sound?
Moderated By: mods
i guess the live aplication is what i was more interested in.
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im more interested in this as a technical aspect of the music in a live situation. not so much that i like the performer / style of music or whatever.
is there stage equipment to do this? or is he just lip syncing to a track made in the studio?
[youtube][/youtube]
im more interested in this as a technical aspect of the music in a live situation. not so much that i like the performer / style of music or whatever.
is there stage equipment to do this? or is he just lip syncing to a track made in the studio?
dots wrote:incesticide
so there is nothing that can change your voice "real time"
you have to prepare everything before hand?
thats too much fucking work.
i just want to walk around the apartment with a wireless mike and talk like a robot all day. mikrokorgs dont do it for me because you have to be strapped into the keyboard and hitting notes all at the same time with your fingers.
you have to prepare everything before hand?
thats too much fucking work.
i just want to walk around the apartment with a wireless mike and talk like a robot all day. mikrokorgs dont do it for me because you have to be strapped into the keyboard and hitting notes all at the same time with your fingers.
dots wrote:incesticide
BZZZT. That could be the case in this day and age, but just the same may be the following, as something Rob could benefit from: There is a classic (it's been around for a decade now) Antares standalone "outboard" rackmount that can do that in realtime without a dedicated comp system, and every studio in Korea had them before the software improvements from Autotune 3 and up came out. In other words, now they're pretty much unused dinosaurs. Do a search for the Antares ATR-1, as they can be found used for under $400.euan wrote:No he is singing into a laptop or something hosting the vst which will be using a midi track all prepared to do the tuning. Thats the way a lot of things work these days.
Rob can now be instant Cher, on the fly.
Yar. Judging by the unedited flutter on notes that weren't quite "on", that Kanye clip sounds like simple realtime autotune and not like vocoded/filtered synthesis stuff.
And Doog, you just nailed it on the final chorus thing: I've literally doen that on heaps of pop track BGVs over here when a mid-tempo ballad takes a dip upward. I simply couldn't resist, and you know how tracking 8 background lines on a 16-measure refrain can tax the patience, non?
And Doog, you just nailed it on the final chorus thing: I've literally doen that on heaps of pop track BGVs over here when a mid-tempo ballad takes a dip upward. I simply couldn't resist, and you know how tracking 8 background lines on a 16-measure refrain can tax the patience, non?
Yeah, but a realtime pitch correction surely can't do it another way? The robot voice stuff is about using unnatural sounding settings to quickly change notes as an effect, rather than a kinda more natural(ish) change (see Army by Ben Folds 5 for an okay example)..
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"So I took mYYYYY old man's advice.."
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Ellen gets her Cher on
You can hear it correct to bum notes because she's clearly not hitting the notes as good as a half decent singer would. It even has a bash to get speech to a "correct" pitch.
[youtube][/youtube]
"So I took mYYYYY old man's advice.."
[youtube][/youtube]
Ellen gets her Cher on
You can hear it correct to bum notes because she's clearly not hitting the notes as good as a half decent singer would. It even has a bash to get speech to a "correct" pitch.
I've got Autotune-4, and both it and AT3 can do realtime, as a track-applied plugin with record/play thru on one's sequencer enabled. Sure enough, you can set it for all kinds of parameters for anything from simple pentatonic to 56-tone Turkish scales, etc. Ellen DGNR8 has hers set on chromatic followed by what sounds like a simple distortion, as her basic vocal timbre seems to be fairly well preserved amidst the dist, rather than being all synthy.