Though I agree that mixing with headphones is difficult (and, for me, impossible), I've noticed that, since I've started mixing with monitors, my mixes not only sound better on speakers, but on headphones, too. I'm not sure why that is, but I'm quite happy about it.Vocals in headphones ALWAYS sound different than speakers. Mixing with headphones can be done, but it is difficult - you have to learn how the speaker sound differs and adjust your headphone mixing accordingly. (in other words, make it sound 'weird' on headphones to sound good on speakers).
I noticed the out-of-tuneness, too -- the vocals sound a little flat (or, alternatively, the instruments sound a little sharp). Other than that, I don't hear much difference between the two versions. Disclaimer: I'm listening at work, so I have to keep the volume on the low side and my speakers, while okay, are hardly monitor quality."Yes it is" is pretty badly out of tune but other than that I don't hear a tremendous difference between old and new.
Wait....what? What track duplication? Why would you need to do that? Just apply the reverb to the vocals as a group. No "duplication" needed, no matter what DAW you're using.Further, applying reverb to a dry vocal takes a long time as it involves track duplication and then a lot of trial and error.
Wait....what? What track duplication? Why would you need to do that? Just apply the reverb to the vocals as a group. No "duplication" needed, no matter what DAW you're using.
I noticed the out-of-tuneness, too -- the vocals sound a little flat (or, alternatively, the instruments sound a little sharp). Other than that, I don't hear much difference between the two versions. Disclaimer: I'm listening at work, so I have to keep the volume on the low side and my speakers, while okay, are hardly monitor quality.
"Because".Yes It Is is a very difficult track. Galeazzo Frudua claims that this is the most difficult and complicated harmony in The Beatles catalogue.
The primary reason I employ duplication is simply to make sure I keep a backup of the original without vocal effects.
Sometimes, though, I use duplication to recreate the classic Beatle slap-back echo by adding 4ms to the duplicated version and then lowering the gain on that duplicated version.
Most of the time, though, I apply full reverb to the duplicate. then, when I playback with both the original and the full-reverb duplicate, I can adjust the gain of that full-reverb duplicate to play around with how much reverb I actually want. That is actually how the hardware does it.
Anyway, all that effort above was more trouble than it was worth. I spent more time doing and undoing different vocal effects that I was losing sleep. Now that I am using the hardware directly in the original, I have yet to regret it ... so far. Never say never, right?
I wondering if I really am out-of-tune on this song ...
Have you ever tried simply adding a send reverb to the whole vocal mix???? That's really how it's done 99.9% of the time. No wonder you're losing sleep doing it the way you're doing it.
Anyway, if you say it works for you, then it works for you. Good luck.
He is trying to mix in Audacity. FYI. I think most of the problem is he is trying to hammer with a shoe. It might work, but pretty hard.
No...off is off....it's off.Steenamaroo/PTravel, then you are noticing the same "out-of-tuneness" I am noticing on the speakers. If you listen with headphones, does the "out-of-tuneness" seem to go away?
So maybe they de-tuned for some reason. You've either got to find a way to de-tune your keyboard while learning the parts, or simply learn it in the key they ended up in. Whether they de-tuned or not, you still have to sing relative to the tuning of the Karoake track you're singing to.I cannot stress how tricky this song is. When I play my keyboard along with the instrumental, the keyboard sounds out of tune. While I cannot find any documentation on this, perhaps The Beatles tuned their instruments off differently for this recording?
Anyway, I'm not putting him down. Most of his Beatles tunes he did a great job on. The only one that sticks out as being really off vocal-wise is "Yes It Is".