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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Reba McEntire uses auto-tune and I don’t care what anyone says….I prefer her voice either way….The only difference I can hear is when she is not auto-tuned she tends to scoop notes more, instead of hitting them solidly. What bothers me when she is auto-tuned is that it takes away from her unique, quirky and textured vocal style and it smooths out that gritty sound in her voice when she sings certain words….that made her a Country Music Icon.
None of these apart from t pain sound horrible tho. maybe a bit unnatural and too “awesome” but not bad
you seriously think new found glory uses auto-tune? HA
all the ‘songs’ included here are such crap that ‘auto-tune’ hardly matters.
t-pain wants to sound that way, that’s his thing.. Shawta-ey
and rebecca black, she cant sing at all!!!!
my rule of thumb: if you can hear auto tune at all in the song, don’t listen to it.
at least this way, these and many other “artists'” sound can be exactly like the rest of their image
FAKE.
I don’t think the sound is that bad. That’s my opinion. You can really tell the auto tune with some of the artists like Dixie Chicks.
This is ridiculous. If they had real talent, like musicians back in the 10s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s, and 70s did. They wouldn’t need this silly tools.
I can’t understand why anyone would be satisfied listening to this attempts to make music.
christ… hadn’t heard these songs in ages. thanks for the nostalgia trip
These guy sum it up perfectly! “Singing like a douchebag” indeed! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4qI5pNU0f0
New Found Glory using Auto-Tune could make sense in their backing tracks…but on the word Thriller especially? I don’t hear it…at all. To be honest, Avril Lavigne’s use of it doesn’t really sound like it. It just sounds like a terrible accent she is giving herself in the pronunciation of the words! listen carefully! T-Pain isn’t using it to auto-correct his vocals, he is using it as a straight up effect. I appreciate his use of it…he is an artist, that is what he brings to the table.
The use of it in Bedingfield and the Dixie Chicks is just BLAH! Especially when Natasha is AMAZING! hearing that is unfortunate…the same with Adam Levine from Maroon 5. Now that it was pointed out to me, his pronunciation of the word “rain” (which coincidentally is the word we are told to hear the auto tune on) is too perfect compared to his other words…heart is broken. lol
now honestly. is it that hard to do multiple takes to make sure all vocal mess ups are accounted for?
I HATE that crap! I was stepping into the game as an engineer when this “abuse” of Auto Tune and Melodyne stuff started getting popular, and it’s ENOUGH already. I came up in the days where Roger Troutman and his brother Zapp were actually PLAYING instruments with the vocoder, and that stuff was CLASSIC.
LOTS of these so-called artists coming in the studio now(doesn’t matter the genre of music), but especially the MC’s and the “love in this club”, “makin’ it rain” crooners KEEP asking for that sound…GOOD GRIEF!!
This over-production trainwreck is what will continue (among other factors) to make one-hit wonders A LOT faster.
Peace.
A few points I just wanted to add…
– Many people get all furious over the idea that a supposed magic plug-in can make people sound like they can sing; don’t worry, it can’t! T-Pain may use the over-tuned effect to an extent that offends some people’s ears, but the fact is… even without it, he can sing. He’s also a talented musician–just hiding that behind pop music, but that’s his choice.
– Rebecca Black is proof positive that no amount of auto-tune can turn a crap voice into something good.
– When the delay effect came out decades ago, it got used to death on everything. After a few years, it became just another tool in the mixing arsenal. Same thing with reverb! History tells us that in a few years the blatant over-use of auto-tune as an effect will also take a back seat and not get abused. So relax ;)
– To the poster above who talked about Roger Troutman–that isn’t a vocoder, it’s a talk box. Same thing that Peter Frampton used on his guitar. Stevie Wonder actually put a synth through one first, then Troutman took it to a whole next level. This effect then got way over-used in funk and then west-coast rnb/rap of that decade. The anti-auto-tune set conveniently forgets this, but at least Troutman has gone down in history as a musical genius (RIP).
-Also, it’s funny that people keep mentioning vocoders. The vocoder has had times of great popularity (decades ago), then disappeared. A few years ago it came back in style again–and you hear it in music. In a few more years, it’ll go away again too. This is how musical trends work.
– We really shouldn’t equate “auto-tune” with “auto-tune intentionally turned up as an effect” because subtle use of this plug-in has been common… with even great singers, for years now. Tuning vocals is standard practice in professional studios (yes, it’s called “tuning vocals” cause there really isn’t much “auto” about it!).
– If an effect sounds bad to you personally, it isn’t wrong. If you don’t like death metal, then you can’t comment on the sound of the kick drum because you have no context to do so. As Dave Pensado pointed out in one of his recording tutorials, T-Pain has made great advances in the use of this effect… and he pointed out some clever lines in one of his songs. If this kind of music isn’t your bag, that’s fine… just don’t get so worked up over it like someone is going to erase every other genre just because a new effect is having a few years of popularity.
Instead of correctly using autotune. Why not just use people who can actually sing? No wait then this crap mus…wait sound not music, would go away. What happen to actual musicianship?
T-Pain is the only one off of this list that using it as an artistic choice, and I respect that. It’s pretty cool, and slightly amusing. But the rest on this list there is no excuse at all. Especially that Dixie Chicks song… “but Iiiii” dear God that’s awful! Let’s face it…vocals are the HARDEST things to record — not the hardest instrument for everyone, but the most volatile. The human voice has hundreds and hundreds of factors that affect it (illness, drugs, time of day, vocal nodules, etc.) When I record my own vocals, I make sure I’ve exercised aerobically that day. My range and clarity become at LEAST 50% better, I wish I had an example…a guitar pretty much will play the same no matter what happens. Maybe changing the amp settings and strings for a session will keep you there for an extra 10 minutes (ahem, you should be doing these things before you walk into a studio anyway!). You can spend an entire day on vocals and the next day get a completely different response from the artist.
Autotune is nice sometimes to have it for like, ONE or TWO corrections for when you’re pressed for time or it’s a needle in a haystack of good takes…but never in a million years would I automate it on vocals.
OK, I admit I do automate Autotune on one instrument only, but not often…and that is THE BASS GUITAR! And only on single note lines though. It’s such a wobbly instrument and the notes are so fundamental that depending on the guitar it needs it otherwise you get “beat frequencies” everywhere.
However if someone can’t hit a take, we’ll be there until we can and we say “That’s the one!” or just postpone it due to fatigue. Not, “Ok the song runs 3 minutes, we’ll do 2 takes in the booth…oh sh*t it’s getting late…whatever, I’ll fix it in post.” Those people should be out of a job since they’re sucking the feeling out of vocal performance. Yet that type of ignorance is bliss when in a time where music is produced an album per minute, studios overcharge and the record companies can’t wait to get their hands on the next 10 million album seller so they can pocket 90% of it, coupled with the fact a producer doesn’t want to get fired because the vocals were “pitchy”…Auto-Tune is a God-send for the suits and a security blanket for the performer. It’s dangerous.
I agree, autotune is definitely overused and abused. But certainly, there are uses for it. However, melodyne is still what the pro’s use, and i definitely prefer it.
Yuck! Sound mingin on every song exept the second one, where Ill let it slide because its obviously and effect, still crap tho.
Here’s the deal. Auto Tune and pitch correction is the fault of the producers for the most part. And some of you may be correct in saying that it can’t make bad singers sound good, and IMHO it makes good singers sound bad (Michael Buble “All I Want for Christmas Is You”), but the MAIN issue is that it doesn’t sound bad enough for the layman to notice, and it makes bad singers sound good enough for the layman to remain ignorant. And since it’s on EVERY EFFING SONG on the radio, every damn TV commercial, and every disgusting episode of Glee, how could they realize it since they don’t have the real thing to compare it to?
The idea about auto tune is it makes everyone sound good, that isn’t good. It also makes pop singers’ voices sound perfect when that’s not the case. When overused it makes the singer’s voice sound robotic and unemotional. Some of my favorite songs don’t use auto tune and I think that’s better. There’s Ringo Starr’s “With A Little Help From My Friends,” the song slides into notes as opposed of hitting them dead on. That’s realistic. Mind you, Ringo doesn’t have the best vocals. Most kids today listen to auto tuned crap and think that’s how music is supposed to sound. Auto tune is terrible and fake.
Nice try on the writer’s part to try to end the “Cher Effect” (as HE calls it), single handedly. To realize that this guy doesn’t have a clue what he’s talking about, all you have to do is turn on the radio. Outdated effect? I don’t think so. Everybody and their cousin still (over)uses this effect. Just because the writer doesn’t care for the effect doesn’t make the effect obsolete or, simply, bad. So what, it’s not his preference, fine. But to mark something as outdated based on his own opinion is just flat out bad writing.
I do agree, it’s a terrible effect, when overused (R&B anybody?). But the harsh autotune effect DOES have its place. Electronic and Industrial music are 2 great examples.
Learn to be flexible, rather than having a fixed opinion on a certain effect and you will definitely find more success.
I finally decided that what is known as pop music (never really my mainstay anyway) started sucking for me back right around 1988 (giving a few years before the benefit of the doubt).
I looked through the pop music rankings going from the mid 60’s through to the present. Â Yep, right around 1988 +/- pop music started to really suck and big time in my book and it’s been downhill ever since. Â I lost interest less due to age and far more due to the fact that, YES, it really was getting that bad! Â So much trite garbage trying to pass itself off as serious musicianship! Â Anyone who had a few tape loops and shallow musicians could put together bland crap that the masses would buy! Â Of course the good groups soldiered on but no longer able to appeal to the young bumpkins who listened to crap rap, hip hop, syrupy all sound the same solo girls, and formulaic musical formulae pumped out by the faceless masters of bland mindless pop! Â The front end of the industry went to schitte right about then.
Sorry, had to share this. Â It was an epiphany!
I think the auto-tune is good or bad depending on the artist, for example, if you look at perfomances of JoJo singing “Too little too late” you can notice she sings the song perfectly, even the high notes, on the other hand, artists and rihanna use the auto-tune in every freaking song and when you listen to her live sounds TERRIBLE. So, in conclusion, it depends if you use auto-tune to give a good effect on the song or try to fool the world into thinking that you sing. sorry for my English!
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