Cubase Studio 4 Users - How To Use Vocoders
Vocoders can in reality be usable and dont necessarily have to sound like a robot. If youre going to utilize this, you'll require two inputs. 1 being a carrier wave, which is the sound you are going to vocode through and the second a modular voice, which will in all likelihood be yours. This provides a synthesiser sound that is easily recognised and in fact has been utilised since the 1960s in well-known music.
Vocoders have a different number of bands, and the reason being is because the modulator takes your voice, analyzes the significant parts which're the fundamental frequencies. And then these're changed into levels of amplitudes on a group of band pass filters. To make your voice much more audible it requires more bands. At long last as these filter signals are carried onto the carrier wave the last sound is emulated.
To reach the classical robot effect you require the modulator to be speech, but you can utilise anything you want as the carrier and the modulator to get other sounds. For instance, if you needed you could run instruments or other synthesizers through the modular in-put. Amusing results are what you'll get. Commonly the carrier would be a pleasantly massive synthesizer sound, like a string sound or still a long saw wave pad. You could utilise anything that had a few good depth and length to it though.
Hardware and software synthesizers that're computer now possess vocoders as ordinary features. Essentially you simply get your monies worth, when it comes to acquiring the sound of a dedicated analog vocoder. For illustration for around $1,000 you will be able to pick up a Roland VP-300 thats in genuinely good shape, but then the old Korg VC-10 can be had much less expensive and finer as well. Then dont leave out the MicroKorg after all it does have a microphone and it is handily small and cheap all at the same time.
Dont rule out the talk boxes for obtaining those robot voice simulations, as they dont all come from the vocoder.Then theres that increasingly popular auto tune software or speech synthesis. - 18780
Vocoders have a different number of bands, and the reason being is because the modulator takes your voice, analyzes the significant parts which're the fundamental frequencies. And then these're changed into levels of amplitudes on a group of band pass filters. To make your voice much more audible it requires more bands. At long last as these filter signals are carried onto the carrier wave the last sound is emulated.
To reach the classical robot effect you require the modulator to be speech, but you can utilise anything you want as the carrier and the modulator to get other sounds. For instance, if you needed you could run instruments or other synthesizers through the modular in-put. Amusing results are what you'll get. Commonly the carrier would be a pleasantly massive synthesizer sound, like a string sound or still a long saw wave pad. You could utilise anything that had a few good depth and length to it though.
Hardware and software synthesizers that're computer now possess vocoders as ordinary features. Essentially you simply get your monies worth, when it comes to acquiring the sound of a dedicated analog vocoder. For illustration for around $1,000 you will be able to pick up a Roland VP-300 thats in genuinely good shape, but then the old Korg VC-10 can be had much less expensive and finer as well. Then dont leave out the MicroKorg after all it does have a microphone and it is handily small and cheap all at the same time.
Dont rule out the talk boxes for obtaining those robot voice simulations, as they dont all come from the vocoder.Then theres that increasingly popular auto tune software or speech synthesis. - 18780
About the Author:
Greg is the founder of VSTPlatinum. It comes jam packed (over 4.7 gigs) with incredible sounds, free vst plugins and world class effects to take your music to the next level. Compatible for use with all major music programs including cubase plugins.


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