Vocal correction programs?

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jerzeysk8board

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What is a good program that i can pitch correct some parts of vocals in my songs? I have cakewalk so i probably can export the files to another program and back
 
Get singing lessons. If you cant sing on pitch then practice until you nail the intonation. Pitch is one thing that is unexcusable to "fix in the mix". Practice and get it right.


antares auto tune if you are a lazy talentless meatwad.
 
Antares auto tune. However, if you have a shakey performance that is out of tune, this will leave you with an 'in tune' shakey performance.
 
I have the antares autotune, how does it work, does it correct automatically when on.
 
jerzeysk8board said:
What is a good program that i can pitch correct some parts of vocals in my songs? I have cakewalk so i probably can export the files to another program and back

If you already own a Cakewalk product you should be able to upgrade to Sonar 5 Producer edition for cheaper than the cost of the Autotune plug. In addition to everything else you'd get in the upgrade, you would also get the Roland V-Vocal plugin which does what you want. There's a demo of this on the Cakewalk site: http://www.cakewalk.com/sonar/vvocalextras.asp Watch the video, it's cool (aside from the corny audio sample they use for it).
 
jerzeysk8board said:
I have the antares autotune, how does it work, does it correct automatically when on.
In order for Auto tune to work properly, you have to know what key the song is in and set the sensitivity.

If you are just putting it on the vocal track in automatic mode, it doesnt work very well unless the vocals are really close. Most people use it in graphic mode. That way, you only fix what is wrong and you don't screw up the rest of the track.

All this is explained in the manual.
 
Wait, you paid $300 for auto-tune and don't know if it's any good for pitch correcting? RTFM!
 
He probably doesn't have the manual. Seems kind of odd that he comes on here asking for a good pitch corrector when he already has one and apparently doesn't even know it. Generally when I buy expensive software I read some of the manual when I get started.
 
jerzeysk8board said:
I have the antares autotune, how does it work, does it correct automatically when on.

Whoa - I must've missed your second post in this thread. But your first one asked what was a good pitch correction program. Im confused :confused: You actually bought an expensive program without knowing what it does?
 
jerzeysk8board said:
I have the antares autotune, how does it work, does it correct automatically when on.


Next time dont Steal the software. Buy it and get the manual
 
Gsnap is a somewhat usable free pitch correction VST.
I used it a few times on some iffy performances, just for shits.
It just makes crappy perfomances more obvious, IMO.
 
The one big thing I never understood about autotuners/pitch correctors:

If the person can't even sing in tune, what's the point of even recording them?

G.
 
SouthSIDE Glen said:
The one big thing I never understood about autotuners/pitch correctors:

If the person can't even sing in tune, what's the point of even recording them?

G.

Ummmm, because she sells millions of albums! :D
 
SouthSIDE Glen said:
The one big thing I never understood about autotuners/pitch correctors:

If the person can't even sing in tune, what's the point of even recording them?

G.
Yeah isn't almost on the same level as telling someone you're the singer on the song that's on the radio at the moment, when it's actually Paul McCartney? Well not quite, but you get the idea..
 
I can't sing, and never sold even one album....go figure. :D
 
SouthSIDE Glen said:
The one big thing I never understood about autotuners/pitch correctors:

If the person can't even sing in tune, what's the point of even recording them?

G.
Because they are paying you to.
 
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