Submitted by horseshitlazy t3_11arhhl in Music
I just listen to songs and lately I am in a discovery phase. I would like to be able to distinguish between autotune voice and non-autotune voice. Some friends find it obvious, but I basically am clueless and can't really tell the difference. Does anyone else find it easy and think they can give tips about learning it or teach it?
squishsquash23 t1_j9tkfre wrote
Sometimes it can be very subtle. Now days almost every commercial track will have some form of pitch correction on it. For some tracks you’ll be able to hear something called artifacts on a persons voice and it’s usually easier to hear it on longer lower notes. It’s usually accompanied by a tiny digital grainy sound and warble as the software is ever so slightly bending and stretching their voice to push it further in tune. The use of a program called melodyne has made it even harder as this program aims to keep the natural inflections in the voice present while subtly bumping the pitch one way or another and is much more hands on. Autotune brand software is more of a “quick-fix” that will either automatically snap your vocal to the right pitch or more naturally slide into the right pitch depending on the settings. It’s getting harder to tell every day but almost everybody uses it now days unless they’re stubborn or don’t have access.