How to Use GSnap Autotune Hardcore Vocals
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Hardcore dance music is characterized by robotic sounding vocals.Digital Vision./Digital Vision/Getty Images
Visit the official GSnap download site, www.GVST.co.uk/GSnap and click "Download GSnap." Click "Save" when prompted. Select a suitable location, such as "Desktop." - 2). Open your preferred digital audio workstation, for example Logic. Open your VST library. The method for accessing the library varies by workstation, but you typically click "Effects," "Preferences" or "Library" to access the VST folder.
- 3). Click "Import" and select the downloaded GSnap file. Alternatively, drag the GSnap file from the desktop into the VST library folder.
- 4). Click on the vocal track you want to effect, this assigns subsequent edits and modifications to this particular track.
- 5). Click "Effects" and select GSnap from the drop-down menu.
- 6). Determine a threshold. The threshold is the amount of deviation from perfect pitch your vocal must have before GSnap kicks in. GSnap works in a similar fashion to a guitar tuner, digitally detecting correct pitch. When a note isn't perfect, GSnap will digitally adjust it. Adjust the threshold dial to a low setting. By setting threshold low, GSnap becomes very "picky" and corrects anything that isn't perfect.
- 7). Click your cursor on the "Speed" virtual dial. This parameter governs the retune speed, which is the rate that GSnap corrects original note. The quicker the adjustment, the more robotic the effect. In her song "Believe," Cher's voice was Auto-tuned with a retune speed of zero to create an immediate pitch-shift.
- 8). Manually adjust some notes. For an intense, hardcore sound to your vocals use the piano interface on the left of the GSnap dialog box to manually select a new note. As the song plays, the current note appears as a waveform in the box on the left. Pause the song at the note you want to adjust and select a note from the keyboard. The further away from the original note, the more hardcore the sound will be. Convert a low to a very high note for the "Chipmunk" effect, which is a distinctive characteristic of hardcore dance music.
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