https://soundcloud.com/pone-sharp/hooves-up-high-cover-sample/s-OFJU3
What do you generally do to mix this thing? To make it sound professional? I'd also like some critique on my singing. I know I'm not great, but that's why I'm here now

itroitnyah wrote:Use some soft autotuning to put your vocals more into the A minor (the key that HUH is in), but the tuning should just be minor, enough to sound natural without distorting the vocals. Then, use some light EQing. If you've read 4thImpulse's amazing frequency chart thingy, there are a few parts that mention vocals, so you can boost or lower those parts. But not overly EQing, of course. It follows the same rule as the auto tuning. Add in a compressor and lightly compress to make the volume levels more in unison with each other, giving you more headroom. But not too much, otherwise you'll distort it. Then add on some light reverb, enough to make your vocals really shine and sound amazing. Maybe some delay for cool effect points. The reverb isn't necessarily essential, but it's a good tool to use. Anything beyond the reverb, such as delay, are purely optional. If you add on a chorus effect, it does just that and it sounds like you're your own personal choir.
itroitnyah wrote:Use some soft autotuning to put your vocals more into the A minor (the key that HUH is in), but the tuning should just be minor, enough to sound natural without distorting the vocals. Then, use some light EQing. If you've read 4thImpulse's amazing frequency chart thingy, there are a few parts that mention vocals, so you can boost or lower those parts. But not overly EQing, of course. It follows the same rule as the auto tuning. Add in a compressor and lightly compress to make the volume levels more in unison with each other, giving you more headroom. But not too much, otherwise you'll distort it. Then add on some light reverb, enough to make your vocals really shine and sound amazing. Maybe some delay for cool effect points. The reverb isn't necessarily essential, but it's a good tool to use. Anything beyond the reverb, such as delay, are purely optional. If you add on a chorus effect, it does just that and it sounds like you're your own personal choir.
Any program you want. It doesn't matter whether you're using Ableton, FL, Logic, or Cubase, as long as you can access the effects that you needPonE-Sharp wrote:What program should I use to do all that?
Motivfs wrote:I might be wrong, but in the competition I believe it said it was in C major.
bartekko wrote:Motivfs wrote:I might be wrong, but in the competition I believe it said it was in C major.
Same thing, different tonic. If you know what you're doing, you can even remix Hooves Up High into E Phrygian
Motivfs wrote:bartekko wrote:Motivfs wrote:I might be wrong, but in the competition I believe it said it was in C major.
Same thing, different tonic. If you know what you're doing, you can even remix Hooves Up High into E Phrygian
This is why I need to take more interest in music theory. I don't even know what E Phrygian is, haha.
Freewave wrote:being too critical can make you too critical
cplbradley wrote:My good friend f3nning did a tutorial on the matter:
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