Pitch correction software has applications from restoration and mix-rescue to outright distortion of a voice or instrument. I’ll discuss some of the more tasteful uses of these auto-tune tools (whether the original from Antares, or a variant like the free GSnap) below. But first I thought I’d highlight their misuse to illustrate the effects we usually try to avoid.
So, listen here to 10 of pop music’s most blatant auto-tune abuses:
If you’re unfamiliar with Auto-tune, and especially if you listen to much pop and rock, you might not hear it initially. When overdone, the effect yields an unnatural yodel or warble in a singer’s voice. But the sound is so commonplace in modern mainstream music that your ears may have tuned out the auto-tune!
The songs in this clip, in order, and the phrases most affected by auto-tuning to help you spot them:
Dixie Chicks – The Long Way Around – Noticeable on “parents” and “but I.”
T-Pain – I’m Sprung – Especially obvious on “homies” and “lady.”
Avril Lavigne – Complicated – Listen to “way,” “when,” “driving,” “you’re.”
Uncle Kracker – Follow Me
The whole vocal sounds strained, but especially the word “goodbye.”
Maroon 5 – She Will Be Loved – Listen for “rain” and “smile.”
Natasha Bedingfield – Love Like This – “Apart” and “life.”
Sean Kingston – Beautiful girls – “OoooOver” doesn’t sound human.
JoJo – Too Little Too Late – Appropriately, “problem” stands out.
Rascal Flatts – Life is a Highway
Every vocal, foreground and background, is treated, but “drive” in particular.
New Found Glory – Hit or Miss – “Thriller”, and every time Jordan sings “I.”
The Cher Effect
When used noticeably, an auto-tuner produces what most call “The Cher Effect“, named for her trademark sound in the song Believe*. (In essence, we named the effect like scientists naming a new disease after its first victim.) Treated this heavily, a vocal track sounds synthetic, and obviously processed.
But not all auto-tuning is so blatant. In the sample above, it’s harder to hear the pitch correction on Uncle Kracker and Avril than on T-Pain and Bedingfield.
Tasteful Uses
As with any tool, a little care can yield great results. Some simple things to keep in mind about pitch correction tools:
- Performance: Most importantly, an auto-tuner isn’t a shortcut to a perfect performance. If you can’t sing the song properly, no amount of post-processing will make it sound like you did. So when your pitch matters, and you don’t want to correct it with an effect, you’ll need to work on your performance until it’s right.
- Less is more: The fewer notes you correct, the less obvious your use of an auto tuner will be. Consider automating the plugin so it acts only when most needed.
- Graphical mode: If your pitch correction software offers a graphical mode (like Antares Auto-Tune and Melodyne,) learn how to work with it. The default “auto” modes are OK for basic corrections, but often produce noticeable yodeling.
- Backing vocals: In general, you can get away with more pitch correction on backing vocals than lead vocals.
- Outdated: Obvious vocoder-style autotuning is dated, and borders on kitschy. The synthetic warbling vocal sound marks songs as having come from a specific era, the same way gated-reverb on drums instantly places a song in the 1980’s. Remember: If you make the auto tuner obvious, people will say your song uses “the Cher effect.” Let this be a guideline.
Be sure it’s needed
Two songs have auto tuners on my mind today: Snoop’s Sensual Seduction (because of Anil Dash’s ruminations on the death of the analog vocoder,) and Natasha Bedingfield’s Love Like This, which I heard on the radio. In the former, the auto tuner is clearly a gimmick. But every time I hear Bedingfield’s song, I’m struck by the same question: Why do that to her voice?
She’s a fantastic singer, and once you’ve heard the song without the cheesy auto tuner effect, it’s hard to take the radio single seriously.
And there’s a lesson in that for home recordists, (even those of us who don’t write pop music,) which echoes the rule of mixing: If an effect significantly changes the sound of a track, especially one so important as the lead vocal, be sure that change improves the song before committing it to the mix.
See Also: The Rule of Mixing
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Tags: freeplugins, mixing
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Derek/desqjockey
Watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8smRRyoYGc
Also, note the comment above: Cher’s effect was Auto Tune. No two ways about it.
Cheers.
Great examples of the auto tune misuse. I think it can be used in a way that is… interesting if it’s done with a purpose. But I find it really crap when it’s used on songs that are supposed to have a feeling of sincerity. If you know what I mean…
Joe – I understand what you’re saying, but have you ever seen them perform live?
I’ve worked in Top 40 radio for 10 years so believe me, I’ve seen my fair share of the Britneys and Backstreet Boys “enhanced” performances so I understand the point you’re trying to make, however Rascal Flatts has definitely performed live every time I’ve seen them. I wouldn’t consider them a “boy band” as most people recognize, other than that the main members of the band happen to all be male…the same that could be said for countless others.
You can debate their remake of a Tom Cochrane classic all you want, that’s simply a matter of taste.
I’m just saying – if you’ve never seen them perform live, and I do mean live – right in front of your eyes, don’t you think it might be just a little unfair to assume they don’t actually have the talent to perform without the aid of a piece of software?
And to point out what may seem like an insignificant oversight on your part – Rascal Flatts fall under the genre of country music, not pop.
Thanks for putting together the sample. I’ve heard kids talk about T-Pain’s voice being “so unique.” Heh.
I think the most embarrassing autotune disaster during a “live” performance was Billy Joel’s Super Bowl National anthem last year.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=OYIMmi7JtHc
No question, Gordon. Here’s the performance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8smRRyoYGc
< cringe >
Most of those are uses of auto tune…the T-pain however is a vocoder… which is an effect the same effect that Cher used on Believe….
the autotune sometimes sounds a bit like a vocoder but when using a vocoder you are doing it on purpose (they’ve been around since the 70’s)
D, scroll up 9 comments.
Cher used an Auto Tuner on Believe. No vocoder. Mark Taylor admitted that he lied when he said it was a Vocoder. He was trying to protect what (at the time seemed like) a trade secret.
Des:
Ok fair enough…. but I still think T-pain was using vocoder (its a big effect in that genre)
I always assumed this was intentional, as recordings can be overdubbed, but the effect gives the audio its own flair. I kinda like the effect, but not most of those songs…
I think you’re right about Auto-Tune rather than an actual vocoder being used for T-Pain (in general) and Snoop (on “Sensual Seduction”). I think the same gimmick is used for Akon. Compare their songs to the vocoder in the chorus of 2Pac’s “California Love” or the middle of ELO’s “Mr. Blue Sky”; clearly, it’s a different effect.
Yea, I think the cher thing is like putting makeup on a model to hide blemishes. How unatural and fake. Whatever happened to talent?
surely the T-pain clip was done purposely to achieve that effect….
Wow! This post has over 30 comments already in just one day.
So that’s what you called it. All this while I thought it was some kind of gadget that you use with your mic. Or is it?
> gadget that you use with your mic. Or is it?
For mix applications, most folks use a plugin.
But there are hardware devices that do the same thing, most designed for live use. (Check out the Billy Joel clip a few comments up)
A fun piss-take of this then-trendy effect was the (released in 2000) White Stripes “You’re Pretty Good Looking” (Trendy American Remix)—the b-side of their “Lord, Send Me an Angel” single. It was the same as the album version except for Cher-effect-levels of auto-tune throughout the entire song.
What, no Shania Twain? Autotune is SO obvious in I Feel Like a Woman!
Let’s not forget Paula Abdul’s catchy ditty before the superbowl.
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Nice post!
T-pain’s entire song sounds like it’s heavly “corrected”.
Reminds me of http://www.gearchange.org/
Simpsons did it:
http://www.thesimpsons.com/episode_guide/1214.htm
Perhaps it’s abuse is overused, but it’s a great tool, especially for live albums. Most people don’t realize that auto-tune is used in almost every single track of every single major artist. It greatly reduces the amount of time to get a perfect track and the skill required by the artist.
It’s great for correcting minor imperfections and if used correctly, I dare even the most attune ear to pick it up easily.
Also, to the person saying that “Life is a Highway” sounds the same in concert: It’s called the Antares Vocal Producer. It does a surprisingly accurate job at re-producing the AutoTune program in a live setting.
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