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jamealpryor
Tea Maker

Joined: Jun 11, 2005
Posts: 28
Location: kansas city missouri |
what effects or good for vocals
i wanna know what effects are good for vocals
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Sat Jun 11, 2005 5:36 am |
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uncle_jerr
Moderator

Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 410
Location: Illinois |
vox fx
effects in general, or specific hardware units and software plugins?
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Sun Jun 12, 2005 1:38 am |
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PNJai
Wannabe

Joined: Apr 27, 2006
Posts: 6
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Beyond compression, I generally use reverb,and maybe a delay...
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Thu Apr 27, 2006 9:55 pm |
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js
Wannabe

Joined: Jun 05, 2006
Posts: 2
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run the vox through a Full-tone full-drive guitar pedal.
also, use some form of an echo chamber/room, recording the vox out of speakers inside the room.
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Mon Jun 05, 2006 8:20 pm |
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RAGEWorks
Tea Maker

Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Posts: 21
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This is so open ended its unbelievable. First thing is first: you need to know how your singer sings/screams/raps/etc. Then, depending on how you record, and what you're recording to, decide wether you want your effects in the signal chain or do you want (or have to) do it in post.
Recently I recorded a metal band that had a screaming demon of a singer. He really wanted saturated vocals with distortion and compression, really wanted it to sound as noisy as possible while still retaining some sense of human voice. I know that most plug-ins I use dont get that gutteral, nasty, sound that a good (or cheap) stombox does. So, I ran the mic to a distortion stompbox and ran that into my preamp and then recorded it. With a little compression, some EQ'ing, and some reverb on bus, we had ourselves a gnarly sounding vocal track. the only problem is that the distortion is in the signal chain, so I wanted to make sure that the sound was SPOT ON when I recorded it. But if he was a regular singer, I'd have 86'ed the stompbox and ran into the preamp directly. Preamp.... have a good one always. Presonus makes some decent, lesser-expensive ones.
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Fri Aug 18, 2006 7:53 pm |
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zacanger
Tea Maker

Joined: Sep 07, 2006
Posts: 25
Location: Pennsylvania, USA |
| js wrote: |
run the vox through a Full-tone full-drive guitar pedal.
also, use some form of an echo chamber/room, recording the vox out of speakers inside the room. |
XD thing is, i have run vocals thru guitar FX before. it's fun.
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Thu Sep 14, 2006 2:51 am |
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RAGEWorks
Tea Maker

Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Posts: 21
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| zacanger wrote: |
| js wrote: |
run the vox through a Full-tone full-drive guitar pedal.
also, use some form of an echo chamber/room, recording the vox out of speakers inside the room. |
XD thing is, i have run vocals thru guitar FX before. it's fun. |
YES! Like I posted, using guitar FX are really fun and can open new doors that you may not have imagined before. I build FX pedals for guitar (A GREAT HOBBY) and I made one that wasnt grounded too well, so (for some reason) if you made a lot of noise (i.e. we yelled at it) it added some serious effect and crazy noise that made the recording one-of-a-kind and the singer couldnt have been happier. Also, try using guitar amplifiers. I run the mic to a guitar amp and some guitar FX boxes and mic the amp and the singer at the same time, NOW THATS F*CKING TRIPPY!!!! _________________ The revolution will not be televised... you'll hear it coming.
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Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:16 am |
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SIM
Wannabe

Joined: Sep 10, 2006
Posts: 11
Location: Canada |
The most common universal straight forword vox effects used in most of todays top 40 charts are chorus and reverb. Not always nesicarily both together, and not a lot either. There are plenty of tracks out there where chorus is added ever so slightly to vox tacks but the average listener wouldn't even notice it. It's just enough added effects that it is adding something only slightly noticable, yet with out it there you can hear a BiG difference.
Kind of like the coconut sprinkles in a macaroon. (if you've ever had one)
Know what I mean? _________________ "Supporter of Independent Music"
---------------SIM-------------------
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Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:51 am |
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zacanger
Tea Maker

Joined: Sep 07, 2006
Posts: 25
Location: Pennsylvania, USA |
| RAGEWorks wrote: |
| zacanger wrote: |
| js wrote: |
run the vox through a Full-tone full-drive guitar pedal.
also, use some form of an echo chamber/room, recording the vox out of speakers inside the room. |
XD thing is, i have run vocals thru guitar FX before. it's fun. |
YES! Like I posted, using guitar FX are really fun and can open new doors that you may not have imagined before. I build FX pedals for guitar (A GREAT HOBBY) and I made one that wasnt grounded too well, so (for some reason) if you made a lot of noise (i.e. we yelled at it) it added some serious effect and crazy noise that made the recording one-of-a-kind and the singer couldnt have been happier. Also, try using guitar amplifiers. I run the mic to a guitar amp and some guitar FX boxes and mic the amp and the singer at the same time, NOW THATS F*CKING TRIPPY!!!! |
Oh, yeah, totally. I did this one song where I ran the vocals through a Line 6 amp with an octave effect and a ton of distortion and had a mic on the singer too. It sounded insane, in a totally kickass way.
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Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:10 pm |
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RAGEWorks
Tea Maker

Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Posts: 21
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wow I bet that was pretty cool sounding!!! _________________ The revolution will not be televised... you'll hear it coming.
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Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:19 pm |
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zacanger
Tea Maker

Joined: Sep 07, 2006
Posts: 25
Location: Pennsylvania, USA |
ja, pretty much. actually today i was recording drums for an industrial/goth/punk thing, and i ran the drums through a behringer x v-amp just for fun. it sounds insane! i dropped the pitch down an octave and turned the compression and gate all the way up. incredibly electronic sounding, in a good way. think roisin murphy.
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Fri Sep 15, 2006 3:08 am |
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RAGEWorks
Tea Maker

Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Posts: 21
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| zacanger wrote: |
| ja, pretty much. actually today i was recording drums for an industrial/goth/punk thing, and i ran the drums through a behringer x v-amp just for fun. it sounds insane! i dropped the pitch down an octave and turned the compression and gate all the way up. incredibly electronic sounding, in a good way. think roisin murphy. |
I would think that might be incredibly noisy or degrading on the signal, but, if it works, it works. What do you record to? Pro Tools? Tape? A multi-track? I use pro-tools and record digitally, I would have done those things with a plug-in, as an after effect. i'd be kinda afraid of the v-amp's permanent effects. Interesting as hell idea though. Might need to try that. _________________ The revolution will not be televised... you'll hear it coming.
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Fri Sep 15, 2006 4:31 am |
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RAGEWorks
Tea Maker

Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Posts: 21
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ah, good ol fostex. My first personal recorder was a fostex 4-track tape recorder. I loved that thing. The digital are decent enough to work, but you just cant play with them like you can with tape. Right on, good work with the materials you had. I bet that was fun. _________________ The revolution will not be televised... you'll hear it coming.
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Fri Sep 15, 2006 8:38 pm |
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