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walters
Engineer

Joined: Apr 30, 2005
Posts: 201
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Air and Breath sounds for vocals
How can i add Air and breath sounds to my recordings?
Acoustic guitars have more of Air sounding when recording
So does Woodwinds breathing and Air is recorded
For Vocals how can i add more Air and Breath to the Vocals?
sound more like a acoustic guitar or a woodwind
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Thu May 26, 2005 9:10 pm |
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AC
Chief

Joined: Oct 31, 2002
Posts: 1071
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Enhance.
| Quote: |
| How can i add Air and breath sounds to my recordings? |
Well firstly there is no substitute for a quality vocal mic, you should alwways try to aim for the best possible recording at the source, if you have a bad recording you will always be trying to "fix it" in the mix and to be honest it will sound that way too .... ... .. .
However, for vocal enhancing you can try a couple of things. Firstly though you need to understand you cannot create what is not already there, all you can try and do is increase the level of the bits you are aiming for.
Breathiness is usually associated with the very top end of a voice and this can be enchanced generally in two ways.
1. aural exciter (amplifies the harmonic series of the sound)
This was mentioned for you here:
http://www.studiorecordingengineer.com/ftopic-977-15.html
2. E.Q. (boosts a broad or tight range of frequencies, not necessarily related to the harmonic series)
I guess compression can be included in the list, although that would just be a kind of boosting too, if used.
Hope that helps. _________________ Recording Studio Suntans
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Fri May 27, 2005 1:58 am |
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walters
Engineer

Joined: Apr 30, 2005
Posts: 201
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Does using a Active Mic capture the breathing and Air of the singers
voice more?
How can i increase the breathing and air from the singers voice
to be picked up from the microphone?
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Fri May 27, 2005 2:36 am |
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AC
Chief

Joined: Oct 31, 2002
Posts: 1071
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Capacitor
| walters wrote: |
Does using a Active Mic capture the breathing and Air of the singers
voice more?
How can i increase the breathing and air from the singers voice
to be picked up from the microphone? |
Yes that is correct an "active" mic otherwise known as capacitor and/or condensor microphone will indeed capture the higher frequencies.
These microphones are famously blessed with having a higher frequency response than their dynamic micrphone cousins have.
This is the point to take away, always get the best possible source recording.
I'll move this to the microphone thread now. _________________ Recording Studio Suntans
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Fri May 27, 2005 2:44 am |
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Sardon
Wannabe

Joined: Feb 15, 2006
Posts: 6
Location: Finland |
I heard a tip that you could use omnidirectional mic with lots of gain and sing very close to it. Then just compress it hard.
Not sure though haven't tested that one out yet, but the guuyy who told me that claimed that HIM uses similar method to record vocals.
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 11:25 am |
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ghull
Wannabe

Joined: Mar 28, 2004
Posts: 7
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LMAO!
This reminds me of those crazy Qantas Airlines mechanics response logs, i.e.:
Pilot: This airplane is really flying funny.
Mechanic: Plane given stern talking to ... advising it to get serious straighten up, and fly right.
Pilot: Huge amount of dead bugs on windshield.
Mechanic: Live bugs on backorder.
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Tue Feb 28, 2006 2:44 am |
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