Vocal harmony plug in
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Vocal harmony plug in
I am looking for any recommendation for a vocal harmony plug in. A company named antares has one called "Harmonyefx" that is inexpensive but it says they have had only limited trial with mixcraft so they cannot say if it is compatible with mixcraft or not. any other recomendations are welcome. Thanks Jimmy
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Antares works. Celemony makes one. You could try Enchoir. Here's a search at Sweetwater that might help. Here'san old forum thread from KVR that has some info.
Personally, I have found Mu Voice to be the best. However, practically speaking, they all sound fake to one degree or another. Nothing (yet) can replace having a good singer.
Personally, I have found Mu Voice to be the best. However, practically speaking, they all sound fake to one degree or another. Nothing (yet) can replace having a good singer.
*Vibrant Audio*
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
bump!
Anyone? I don't want "fake" harmony but the ability to make them based on an existing vocal (using same voice).
Anyone? I don't want "fake" harmony but the ability to make them based on an existing vocal (using same voice).
- TrevsAudio
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Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Looking at the dates of the previous posts; if you haven't found it in 10 years, why not try doing the harmonies yourself? Very natural
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Trevor
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Trevor
OFC™ Founding Member
Dell 3050 SFF; i3; 32 gig RAM; MX 8, 9 and 10.5 Pro; Win 11 Pro
Focusrite Solo; Sennheiser HD650 cans
Sample Projects: https://soundcloud.com/trevs_audio
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@trevsaudio
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
I haven't been looking for 10 years. I just came across the thread on an internet search which is relevant to the topic.
It sounds like izotope nectar can do this but it's very expensive. Again looking for true harmonies, not fakey-sounding "simulated" ones or simple pitch shifters etc.
- Mark Bliss
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Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Agreed Trevor. Ten years later and Vibrant Audio's original reply is pretty "on point"
In addition to the titles mentioned, the ZPlane Vieklang harmonizer and the Eventide H-3000 or quadra/octovox titles have good reps.
They are all "simulated" harmonies and pitch shifters, so I dont really understand your question. And yes, all the better quality plug ins trend toward the pricy side. Surprise!
In addition to the titles mentioned, the ZPlane Vieklang harmonizer and the Eventide H-3000 or quadra/octovox titles have good reps.
They are all "simulated" harmonies and pitch shifters, so I dont really understand your question. And yes, all the better quality plug ins trend toward the pricy side. Surprise!
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Is there a good FREE one?
- Joe -
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Mixcraft comes with Melodyne. As I understand it that is what the big boys use to generate harmonies. I use it for harmonies often - it not only shifts the pitch but attenuates the formant. In solo it's a bit ropey but in the mix it's pretty convincing.
- Ian Craig
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Re: Vocal harmony plug in
MUnison is also not free but MeldaProductions do different 4 plugins each at half price every week, subscribe to their mailing list to keep informed.
ZPlane's Veilklang is very good but awkward to use.
Melodyne is good, but I'm not sure how much the essentials version included with Mixcraft can do.
Antares Harmony Engine is quite good but very expensive.
ZPlane's Veilklang is very good but awkward to use.
Melodyne is good, but I'm not sure how much the essentials version included with Mixcraft can do.
Antares Harmony Engine is quite good but very expensive.
Mixcraft 9 Pro Studio (build 470) recording output using MRecorder
AMD Ryzen 8 Core 3.0 GHz (40 GB Ram) & Intel i9 11th Gen 3.5 GHz (64GB Ram),
Windows 10 Professional
Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 & 8i6
AMD Ryzen 8 Core 3.0 GHz (40 GB Ram) & Intel i9 11th Gen 3.5 GHz (64GB Ram),
Windows 10 Professional
Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 & 8i6
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Yeah I’ve also played with Melodyne for creating harmonies too.aj113 wrote:Mixcraft comes with Melodyne. As I understand it that is what the big boys use to generate harmonies. I use it for harmonies often - it not only shifts the pitch but attenuates the formant. In solo it's a bit ropey but in the mix it's pretty convincing.
- Joe -
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Thx but also pricey...Mark Bliss wrote:Agreed Trevor. Ten years later and Vibrant Audio's original reply is pretty "on point"
In addition to the titles mentioned, the ZPlane Vieklang harmonizer and the Eventide H-3000 or quadra/octovox titles have good reps.
Probably a bad choice of words on my part. I don't want something to simply apply effects to an existing voice like delay etc. I want it to sound like a second voice singing harmony to the first. ie sounds like "real harmony" not simply applying "harmonics"They are all "simulated" harmonies and pitch shifters, so I dont really understand your question.
Nah. Many good inexpensive and even free ones out there. Surprise back!And yes, all the better quality plug ins trend toward the pricy side. Surprise!
Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Awesome... Please post a link for a good free harmonizer.Nah. Many good inexpensive and even free ones out there. Surprise back!
- Joe -
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
MX9PS, 64-bit, build 460. Windows 10, Intel i5, 64-bit, 1.8GHz, 8GB.
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/joelouvar
- Mark Bliss
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Re: Vocal harmony plug in
Yep. Go on, I'm all ears.
I have yet to see a free or inexpensive pitch correction/shift program that didn't sound about the same as any other. Which is to say..... not too good. You could simply use the transpose (or whatever each may call it) function built in to most DAW's and get about the same results. Its good for its intended purpose, but moving far enough from the source note (for good harmonies) gives pretty poor results in my experience.
Plus, its not just about sound, some of the mentioned titles have smart interfaces that help speed up the process of creating usable harmonies. I believe some also allow for MIDI input so you can play chords or intervals to quickly get the desired result. Haven't experienced that myself though.
I have a producer friend who I believe has for years used "Alter Boy" (Sound Toys?) to pitch shift and create harmonized backing vocals pretty convincingly. Pro work.
But a backing vocal level often hides a little. A harmonized lead is more demanding and noticeable obviously.
I have experimented with Melodyne with some good results, but the basic versions lack the tools and functions to correctly get the formants right. (I have upgraded, but honestly haven't taken the time to learn the additional tools yet)
The basic versions (Of Melodyne) are good at small moves. A few semi-tones for example. An interval move of a third maybe some of the time. Fifth, not so much usually. An octave? Generally sounds like crap. And good 3 part harmonies (for example) require a fifth and an octave.
I have yet to see a free or inexpensive pitch correction/shift program that didn't sound about the same as any other. Which is to say..... not too good. You could simply use the transpose (or whatever each may call it) function built in to most DAW's and get about the same results. Its good for its intended purpose, but moving far enough from the source note (for good harmonies) gives pretty poor results in my experience.
Plus, its not just about sound, some of the mentioned titles have smart interfaces that help speed up the process of creating usable harmonies. I believe some also allow for MIDI input so you can play chords or intervals to quickly get the desired result. Haven't experienced that myself though.
I have a producer friend who I believe has for years used "Alter Boy" (Sound Toys?) to pitch shift and create harmonized backing vocals pretty convincingly. Pro work.
But a backing vocal level often hides a little. A harmonized lead is more demanding and noticeable obviously.
I have experimented with Melodyne with some good results, but the basic versions lack the tools and functions to correctly get the formants right. (I have upgraded, but honestly haven't taken the time to learn the additional tools yet)
The basic versions (Of Melodyne) are good at small moves. A few semi-tones for example. An interval move of a third maybe some of the time. Fifth, not so much usually. An octave? Generally sounds like crap. And good 3 part harmonies (for example) require a fifth and an octave.