Some basic advice
iovaykind said:
like ryan cabera's song "true", how do you achieve that kind of sound? Is it seriously just great singers like that that can do that? Because people like Ashley simpson can't sing but it still sounds like they can on recording. I can sing, but not as well as I want to..is there anyway to record better or techniques to help your voice?
I don't know if this is the right forum, sorry.
iovaykind,
There are improvements you can make on your lead vocals that don't involve voice lessons or tons of new expensive gear.
BTW...all the prior posts offer sound advice. Multi-million dollar studios staffed with the best pro engineers and producers CAN polish vocal turds into the realm of decency. Most of us home recordists are not great turd polishers. I'd also say that a world class professional vocalist would probably be able to deliver a great vocal track with a Tascam 4 track cassette recorder (yes, I'm an old bastard and actually have one of these!) and an SM57.
Here's my addmittedly amature common sense (no additional cost) approach:
Before you track your lead vocal part, rehearse it till it stops improving. Record pratice takes and study them for proper phrasing, pitch and positioning (working the mic). This will allow you to approach the track with complete confidence.
Attitude, emotion and vibe are critical to a strong lead vocal performance. Tom Petty (ex: Breakdown or American Girl), Mick Jagger (ex: Memory Motel from Black and Blue), Eddie Vedder (ex: Jeremy or Even Flow), etc, etc...don't have great voices IMO but all have leveraged their imperfections into "their sound".... Their voices fit their material. They are professionals and work at this as their job...their art, probably maniacally so.
I'm not suggesting this is what you are doing but don't expect to throw up a vocal mic and one take a perfect vocal that can be compared to a commercial release. Thinks weeks/months until you establish a great core process and the ability to successfully adapt to the next musical situation. I don't have a great lead vocal voice, probably not even average but I can tell you that my lead vocal performances showed great improvement when I started taking more responsibility for my performance by paying closer attention to the track and fixing my own performance problems. I do all originals so I often end up re-writing a melody line to better fit the tune and/or my voice.
I'd say fix everything in your control before you even start thinking about magic fixes (ie: gear, effects, etc). You can also read all the great posts on this site and experiment. If you look hard enough and apply yourself you can learn something new here most every day. Just keep trying and experimenting. Don't get caught up in wanting too much, too quick. You can't cheat the talent and knowledge God's.....
Bart (stepping off the soap box)