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BajoElSol
New member
Hey folks. I could really do with some good advice on how to record backing vocals, and mixing them. I can't seem to find that pure colour that I hear on my favorite productions,
Thanks
Thanks
sweetnubs said:aaah yes the ever elusive pure color! In order to acheive pure color you need something that will make your recording warm, got it! warm. not cloudy or muddy or tinny or even brittle but warm. analog is warm. digital can sound tizzy or icy not smooth, warm or even full or organic. pure color is not easy my friend, not easy at all. Sometimes when trying to acheive pure color it can turn tubby real fast, sometimes some red or orange will slip in there distracting from the blue and green overtones. When the blue and green mix with a hairy or earthy sound it can spiral into fuzzy and murky terrtiory real fast. If that happens then add a little crispness to the sound, sometimes even a little edge to the sound with the white and yellow dial. This will bring you back into pure color.
I have always wondered how to get a back up vocal sound in most of the female R&B/hip-hop tunes on the radio/TV today.
NashBackslash said:I have always wondered how to get a back up vocal sound in most of the female R&B/hip-hop tunes on the radio/TV today.
I don't know how to describe it in a sound engineer's term, but I can generally describe it as smooth, angelic and bright.
You know, the backing vocal sounds like on Destiny's Child's, Mariah Carey's or any other modern female singers.