There seems to be some debate on which is better to use: Melodyne or Autotune? I say, why not use the best parts of both plug ins. This video shows you how to do that.
Which do YOU use? AutoTune, Melodyne, or both? Let us know in the comments section below.
[youtube]5wsNs1kmQ4Y[/youtube]
I own both and this is exactly how I use them. Glad to see I’m doing something right! 🙂 lol
I’m glad I’M doing something right. Thanks for the comment and support Matt!
Great Idea! Great Tips & Tricks! I will get a lot of mileage from these.
I use Melodyne. I will also bounce the results to a new track to regain my CPU processing time.
Later
Ian Scott Stewart
Check out tomorrow’s video (or maybe the next day). I show how I do that too 🙂 Thanks Ian. (you are STILL the man!)
Sweet! Thanks for doing a video answer to some questions I’ve had!
Blessings!
Brian
Glad to do it Brian. Stay tuned. More to come… about 28 days worth 🙂
Hi
For my needs: correction and editing vocals I’m happy with Cubase’s own VariAudio.
Koen
thanks Koen. I wonder why PT doesn’t have a “native” pitch correction?..hmm
I use the Melodyne-like V-Vocal that is included in Sonar. Works pretty slick!
I’ve never tried that Robert. I have’nt even tried Sonar come to think of it :-/
I don’t use any of them – not because I’m against it, but they don’t exist in my operating system (Linux). In stead, I use Fons Adriansen’s AT1 which despite it’s very simple (or maybe because) interface is very usable:
http://kokkinizita.linuxaudio.org/linuxaudio/zita-at1-doc/quickguide.html
Jostein
How does it sound Jostein?
It does very good what it is made for: -Very natural and musical sounding on errors that are not to big. I haven’t really had the opportunity to test it on bigger errors, but that will change in a near future because I’m going to record my own voice on several songs this fall. 🙂
And of course, the better the vocalist, the better both programs work! It sure beats the days we didn’t have either…
That’s true Richard. I remember back in the day when the Digitech Vocalist was my best chance to clean up vocals… then the PCM-90 with pitch change doing one syllable at a time.. glad those days are gone!