A friend of mine wants me to add vuvuzelas to his video. This is an attempt to recreate the last World Cup in South Africa. What is the best/most authentic way to take one source and make it sound like many?
What I have: 1 vuvuzela, 3 mics (and a subkick I made that i'll try just for fun), recorded via MOTU 896hd using Audiodesk to my Macbook. I also have an MBOX 2 mini and can use protools if needed as well to mix.
I guess my plan right now would be to set up all my mics and blow the vuvuzela until I'm about to pass out and then repeat the process over a few times. Then take all of those tracks, offset them a bit, and process them each a bit different and then repeat until I end up with what sounds like many. The theory being that each mic will present different sounds, and then each bit of processing will create different sounds and eventually that will sound like there are a lot of different people playing.
Any advice on something like this? Is there an effect that will simulate it, or at least make it easier to achieve?
What I have: 1 vuvuzela, 3 mics (and a subkick I made that i'll try just for fun), recorded via MOTU 896hd using Audiodesk to my Macbook. I also have an MBOX 2 mini and can use protools if needed as well to mix.
I guess my plan right now would be to set up all my mics and blow the vuvuzela until I'm about to pass out and then repeat the process over a few times. Then take all of those tracks, offset them a bit, and process them each a bit different and then repeat until I end up with what sounds like many. The theory being that each mic will present different sounds, and then each bit of processing will create different sounds and eventually that will sound like there are a lot of different people playing.
Any advice on something like this? Is there an effect that will simulate it, or at least make it easier to achieve?