Friday, 20 January 2012

Sound like T-pain, 'sing' like him too


Twice a month we revisit some of our reader favorite posts from throughout the history of Audiotuts+. This tutorial was first published in July 2008.
Ever heard a song by T-Pain on the radio and wondered how the robotic vocal effect is achieved? By the end of this tutorial, you will own the autotuning sound that is used on so many pop records right now.
You may assume that it takes a masterful engineer and a lot of money in hard effects to get that autotuned sound, but that’s not the case: using only a few steps and a simple plugin you will be well on your way. In this tutorial we’ll go one step further and show you how to create an autotuning effect that sounds as good as the pros.
This tutorial assumes basic knowledge of VST effects and FL Studio. You will need  unsecured loans Antares AutoTune VST or a similar autotuning VST to perform this effect correctly, and of course, a microphone that is able to record into FL Studio. Besides that plugin, I will be using the effects packaged with FL Studio to finish shaping the sound.
Tutorial Setup:
  • iMac Core2Duo 2.16ghz
  • 2GB Ram
  • Audio Technica ST90 Microphone 
  • Alesis IO 26

Step 1

Make sure you’ve purchased Antares AutoTune, a similar VST, or have picked up the demo. If you’re wary of purchasing this product, I’ve found that if you are working with any sort of vocals it pays for itself almost immediately.
We are going to setup a mixer channel in FL Studio to pickup our microphone. Mine is on Blobusound Channel 2, so I select that accordingly.
If done correctly, you should have activity on the input meter. If not, you’re going to need to check your ASIO/WDM settings, or make sure that you have a soundcard or interface that can support a microphone input.
Assuming you have activity coming in and that you can hear yourself, load Antares AutoTune onto the first slot of the mixer. Notice any difference? You probably can’t–we need to change some settings before going further.
This is the raw vocal I’ll be working with in this tutorial:

raw_vocal.mp3

Step 2

At this point, you’re going to want to change the “Input Type” at the top. This helps the tuning engine accurately adjust the incoming signal (in this case, your voice) to “tune” correctly. bad credit loans We are going to manipulate the tuning engine by changing it to “Alto/Tenor Voice”. This will trick the AutoTuner into shifting your voice upwards, and “filling in” your missed notes with a synthesized “voice.”
With the input type changed, it is now time to change the key and scale. T-Pain’s hit song ‘Buy U A Drank’ is in B-flat minor, so we’ll change the key to B-flat and the scale to minor.
You may notice some difference here, but the key to real auto-tuned vocals is to change the “Retuning” threshold to as fast as possible, in this case “0.” With it down at zero, when your voice fluctuates from note to note, it detects what note your voice is in, then jumps it to the next note in the scale, keeping it in key. With these basic settings in place, you should be singing your robotic heart out.

vocal_autotuned.mp3



Step 3

The spirit of this effect is to sound a little more robotic, so what we are going to do now is further create that robotic/artificial sound using other effects. These effects will change from microphone to microphone, so it is important to experiment until you get the sound you’re looking for.
The next thing in my FX chain after the auto-tuner is going to be an EQ plugin. I’ll be using this EQ to brighten up the highs, and exaggerate the artificial effect. Using EQUO, I’ve boosted all of the frequencies past 2.5khz to about 400%. This exaggerated EQ will add even more definition to the robotic effect. This may produce too much brightness on nicer microphones, so you may want to start at 400% and work your way down until you’ve got a reasonably bright vocal.

vocal_autotune_eq.mp3



Step 4

After the EQUO, I’ll add a Reverb effect to the chain. This is my standard vocal Reverb palette, and I’ve placed it at about 50% volume to make sure that it isn’t too overpowering on my vocals.

vocal_autotune_eq_reverb.mp3



Step 5

Optional: At this point, I’ve found that inserting the newly-added Soundgoodizer plug-in after the Reverb works very, very well on autotuned vocals. Give it a shot in the effects chain to get some interesting effects due to Soundgoodizer’s limiter. It also keeps the volume level high and limited, which adds to the artificial sound.



Step 6

After the Fruity Reverb, I’ll add what is probably the most important and delicate effect in the chain, a chorus. Refer to the settings snapshot to recreate this wonderful effect: it will give your vocal plenty of depth, and it has convinced many of my listeners that I am not, in fact, recording on a $25 microphone!




Step 7

Moving on from there, my next effect is the Fruity Delay Bank. I’ve kept this one simple, and it will create a little more atmosphere along with the Reverb that was added earlier in the chain. Notice that I’ve used some pretty crazy volume/mix values for the effects. Sometimes an effect becomes too overpowering at full volume, so experiment with turning it down until you achieve a nice balance.
To smooth everything out after the Fruity Delay Bank, I’ll throw a Fruity Compressor onto the channel and you are recording-ready and set to sound like T-Pain!



Listen to the final product:

Contents:
  • All audio files
  • Printable PDF tutorial
  • Bonus audio: autotuned vocal acappella.

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

WE7 -Spotify rival, and upcoming genius

GMG Radio, the owner of the Smooth, Real Radio and Rock Radio brands, has launched an on-demand service to allow users of the music-streaming website We7 to sample its radio stations.
We7: offering three GMG Radio music streams from today
We7: offering three GMG Radio music streams from today
From today (28 June), We7 users can listen to a mix of around 60 to 70 songs they are likely to hear on either Smooth, Real Radio and Rock Radio, combined with station trails, promos and jingles, but no ads.
We7 claims to have three million users every month and the three GMG Radio music streams will be updated by GMG Radio every week, with the imaging updated more frequently.
The deal is the second phase of GMG Radio’s relationship with We7. GMG Radio already provides we7 with Real Radio-branded news and entertainment in both audio and written form.
Jonathan Gillespie, group commercial director, GMG Radio said: "This deal provides another great way for consumers to sample our three brands and makes them available on a key platform where users are engaging with a wide variety of music genres."
Users will be able to listen to the Smooth, Real Radio and Rock Radio services while they are on the we7 website or using the We7 app, which launched in March, but they are not unsecured loans downloadable as a podcast.
Earlier this month, We7 announced it was to push into continental Europe to double its headcount, after an estimated seven-figure funding injection from investors, including former Genesis frontman Peter Gabriel.
Steve Purdham, chief executive of We7, said: "The power of great radio stations such as Smooth is its music ‘DNA’ and its personalities. Digital solutions have a long way to go to deliver that heritage.

"But digital radio is more than broadcasting what is being played now, bad credit loans with personalisation and portability becoming important. This way, digital audiences get the best of all worlds – the convenience of cloud-based music access and the passion of music from people who understand what audiences like."
GMG Radio is part of the Guardian Media Group.

Monday, 16 January 2012

Lollapalooza!!

SANTIAGO, Chile — A franchise expands to an unlikely spot this weekend as Lollapalooza, the giant rock festival that has become an annual event in Chicago, opens a new front here in the capital of Chile.
In Chicago, Lollapalooza books more than 100 bands for three days in August. Here, more than 50 acts are scheduled to perform on Saturday and Sunday in O’Higgins Park, the second-largest park in Chile, taking advantage of its existing performance spaces (including a disco with room for 15,000 people) as well as a giant outdoor stage. Like Lollapalooza in Chicago, the event is located within the city, easy reachable by public transportation and bicycle. Two-day general admission tickets are about $160. unsecured loans
The headliners are American, among them Kanye West, the Killers, the Deftones and Jane’s Addiction, led by Lollapalooza’s founder, Perry Farrell.
But the early portion of each day’s bill, out of necessity or local pride, features Chilean and other Spanish-speaking bands, among them Bomba Estereo from Colombia, the bad credit loans Spanish rapper La Mala Rodriguez, the rapper and singer Ana Tijoux (born to Chilean expatriates in France) and the singer and songwriter Javiera Mena from Chile. The local radio station Radio Uno (97.1 FM), which plays Chilean pop, also claimed Mr. West in a way, promoting Lollapalooza Chile with a snippet from his “Homecoming”: “I’m talking about Chi-Town.” Chi as in Chile, perhaps.
In an interview, Mr. Farrell said he does not expect the first Lollapalooza Chile to be profitable, or necessarily to break even. The park, about one-fourth the size of New York’s Central Park, can hold more than 100,000 people, he said; he is expecting about 40,000 each day. This is the proof-of-concept Lollapalooza Chile, said Mr. Farrell, who is determined to make it an annual event. He said that some performers were paid a premium to appear at a festival far off their usual tour itineraries. (His own Jane’s Addiction performed in Argentina on the way to Lollapalooza Chile.)
This year is the 20th anniversary of the first Lollapalooza, a very different touring festival that was a startling confluence of punk, hip-hop, new wave, electronica and (then as now) Jane’s Addiction. After long gaps, Lollapalooza returned as the Chicago festival in 2005, and Mr. Farrell said he had wanted to expand somewhere.
“We could have gone into Europe and the U.K. and tried to bust out another festival,” he said, “but they’ve got a thousand festivals over there.” He met the Chilean producers of Lollapalooza Chile, Lotus Producciones, and its leaders reminded him, he said, of the young promoters of the original Lollapalooza.
“They were available and they were desirous, and we were available and we were desirous,” he said before quoting “Jane Says,” an early Jane’s Addiction song: “I only want ’em if they want me.”

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

baby blue ivy


"We are happy to announce the arrival of our beautiful daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, born on Saturday, January 7, 2012," the couple wrote. "Her birth was emotional and extremely peaceful, we are in heaven. She was delivered naturally at a healthy 7 lbs and it was the best experience of both of our lives. We are thankful to everyone for all your prayers, well wishes, love and support."


After checking into New York City's Lenox Hill Hospital, reportedly under the name "Ingrid Jackson," Beyonce has given birth to a baby girl. According to E! News, the superstar singer welcomed Blue Ivy Carter late Saturday night (Jan. 7), delivering via planned C-section.

While initial reports suggested the singer and husband Jay-Z had named the baby Ivy Blue, the online consensus now seems to be that it's the other way around. Lending credence to this notion is Gwyneth Paltrow, who took to Twitter earlier this morning to clarify.

And she's not the only one tweeting about the momentous event. bad credit loans Russell Simmons sent his congrats early Sunday morning, followed minutes later by Rihanna.

"Welcome to the world princess Carter!" the singer tweeted. "Love Aunty Rih."

Former Destiny's Child bandmate Kelly Rowland, who gave a most generous and extravagant baby shower gift to her close friend, promised she would be there during the delivery, and we're sure she was right by Bey's side.

Since Queen B shocked the world at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards red carpet in August when she announced her pregnancy, eager fans have been waiting with baited breath for the baby to arrive. With the delivery date for Jay-Z's bundle of joy changing and rumors swirling around the '4' creator's allegedly fake baby bump, the tension has been mounting. Now that the Jay and B heiress has arrived, talk of Beyonce's mysteriously deflating baby bump will quiet down.

Throughout her pregnancy, the chanteuse-turned-actress dropped hit video after hit video. We've seen the slim and saucy Beyonce in her 'Party' clip, which was filmed back in August with Roc Nation rapper J. Cole. 'Love on Top' featured a pre-pregnancy Beyonce, unsecured loans trim side profile and all. Then, in the appropriately titled 'Countdown' video released in October, Beyonce liberally flaunted her very pregnant belly.

Since the 30-year-old songstress has shown us each side -- and stage -- of her pregnancy, we wouldn't be surprised if a baby Blue Ivy cameo was in works for her next video.