by itroitnyah » 13 Jan 2013 16:49
Yeah, IL Pitcher, IL Newtone can help you to get the pitch perfect, and Pitcher can help with other vocal effects, like chorusing the voice so that it sounds a bit more like a chorus, and a bunch of other cool things, so Pitcher is something that you should definitely go for with vocals. I'm not sure is Melodyne does the same things that Pitcher does.
If you find the user "the4thImpulse" (which you should be able to find without too much effort), in his signature he has a bunch of links to threads that are useful, one of them is the most detailed frequency chart you will ever see, and that has many awesome tips for EQing with vocals, definitely check that out. You may have to read through it quite a bit, but you'll find the tips strewn about within it. Hey, it'll help a bit with mixing as well! I'd recommend reading the entire thing.
Reverb as well. This part is more experimental, so feel free to mess around until you get results you want.
edit: compression as well! You can use this for two things:
1) lowering the sharp peaks on the "s" "t" and "p"'s, just set the threshold low enough that it only encompasses the peaks of those consonants, and set the ratio fairly high with a fairly hard knee.
2) making the volume of all the parts of the vocals more equal. Just set the threshold low enough that it barely, if at all, touches the tips of some of the lower peaks of the body of the vocals (not the tips of the spike peaks from the s, t, or p, the regular peaks) and set a low enough compression that it doesn't distort the vocals and a light knee, if any knee at all. gentle attack and release as to leave the vocals undamaged to the human ear, but lower them to be fairly equal to the rest of the vocals.
You can do both methods at once, just put the compressor for the s, t, and p peaks first in the chain. It's easier to do this with a visual compressor like Fruity Limiter (if you have FL Studio). After you've applied the compression, increase the gain to make the volume to a good level again too.