R
Robert D
New member
guttadaj said:So no different treatment or positioning of the doubled track? Not even a different preamp or mic or anything?
-Jeff
It's rare that I actually want a doubled vocal to reveal itself, so I never use 2 different mics, or preamps, and very little panning. Anything that provides an auditory clue that the fat vocal is actually two vocals is usually something I want to avoid. There's plenty of effect in the constantly varying deltas of the pitch / timing / timber / and formants of the two takes, even when the second take is absolutely nailed.
guttadaj said:Just a close-to-identical additional take is the whole trick to it? Don't you get a lot mud by having close to the same 2 tracks always fighting over the same frequencies?
-Jeff
If you are recording mud, you'll get thicker, gooier mud. Otherwise, no, the frequencies aren't competing, they're complimenting much the same way as unison strings on instruments compliment each other.