Great sound : VocalSynth was rethought to get the best sound, faster than ever. Choose and combine five unique vocal instruments or choose from hundreds of presets for a quick process.
Lose yourself in layers, textures, effects, blending and morphing on the experimental vocal playing field and you will finally find that you have discovered the secret that makes your vocals stand out. Quickly get the vintage vocal sound that you need or create vocals in the spirit of a new wave. Transformation of vocals : transform your vocal parts with the help of the most unique plug-in. Built-in Styles get the grunt work out of the way so you can focus on the creative finishing touches.ĭescription : VocalSynth 2 is an exciting vocal experience that adapts and develops with your unique style and opens up a world of new vocal possibilities. Nectar is a complete set of 11 vocal production effects combined in one plug-in that's designed to give you immediate results. 'There is something exciting, inspiring, and intuitive about iZotope's products.we use them in the studio and live on stage, especially for unique vocal effects. Three distinct processing modes Auto, MIDI, and Sidechain modes allow control over vocoder-inspired effects and unique signal modulation for added creativity. VocalSynth 2 works within the iZotope ecosystem to connect with other plugins like Neutron, Ozone, and Tonal Balance Control.
System Requirements Platform: Windows 10 / 8 / 7, Mac OS Sierra 10.12, Mac OS X El Capitan 10.11, Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite, Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks, Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. IZOTOPE SOFTWARE: Driven by a passion for audio, iZotope develops innovative products that inspire and enable people to be creative. you'll say mad not to :) Melodyne Editor is just to pricey at the mo.System requirements : Windows 7, 8, and 10, 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7 (or comparable), VocalSynth’s Wave-meter requires a graphics card that supports Open GL 2.0 Tempted, but really shouldn't be spending the $130. I think so but you can't rely on pictures when it's not clearly described). Then ugrade to Nectar 2 Production Suite, either through Plugin Boutique $99, or ~$10 cheaper through JRR Shop (but awaiting confirmation that that one is Production Suite - not Standard. Nectar Elements from Plugin Boutique ~$35 USD VX-64 Vocal Strip (Sonar) - DeEssing, Doubling (again) and CompressingĪlso sales on for iZotope Nectar at present: MAutoPitch - More metallic, additional phrasing, doubling, Key/Scale as aboveĤ. Melodyne - Pitch Correction (Sonar) - little required ) - Simply read they keyĢ. MRingModulator is worth a play too.įor the T-Pain type effect I've found best initial results with GSnap in the Minor, Phrygian and Lydian scales (resp) in the key of your recording. MAutoPitch can make things a little more 'metallic' and has 'doubling' presets to make a fuller sound. Try combining it with MAutoPitch - very good. but reasonably priced and perhaps worth a crack. Izotope Nectar Elements appears to be on permanent 77% off sale via Plugin Boutique [Obviously it's a teaser to it's big brother. and there's something I've been interested in but just never hit the buy button. Checkout GSnap and the video (and the others) - linked from here.
Bedroom Producers Blog is a great site to keep on top of free offerings.
I've used Melodyne to do minor pitch corrections, duplicate notes to harmonies, and convert audio to midi, but I understand the T-Pain effect is easier attained via Autotune (even than full Melodyne(?))īut regardless.
Sonar, from X3 Studio and 2015 Professional includes Celemony Melodyne Essential edition (monophonic - upgradable).
The big players in this technology have been Antares and Celemony. It was popularized, if not discovered, by over-egging the levels on Antares Autotune. In my research however I did learn that that Cher 'Believe in Love' sound has become known as the T-Pain effect, after an artist who is less known to me. And who can pass up on giving a few Daft Punk robots a go(?) :) My initial aim was toward the Peter Frampton sound, which a Vocoder does OK to mimic a physical Talkbox (it's the same principle).