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Warming up the vocals in Logic Pro

Hi

really enjoying Logic Pro so far, having gravitated from Garageband IOS.

One thing I'm a bit lost on is adding some "warmth" to vocals. in GB IOS I just use the inbuilt vocal tune/crush dials and was able to get the effect I want.

Any suggestions on which built in effects I should, other than some reverb ?

thanks

Comments

  • 1) Setup a GB IOS project with those dials in place.
    2) import it into Logic for iPad
    3) it will likely surface the actual plugins GB was using all along

  • First places to start for warming up vocals without destroying them would be the compressor and vintage EQs

    If you insert any of the vintage EQs on a vocal, just turning up the drive will get you nice and subtle saturation even with the EQ flat.

    The compressor has some models that can also do wonders if used correctly.

    Using the 1176 model into an La2a is a classic. shave off small amounts of the peaks with the 1176 (either of the FET models - studio is a blackface 1176, vintage is a silverface). Opto is the LA2A which you want to use gently. No more than a dB or two for each compressor.

    You can also use the distortion to add a lot of warmth. For more extreme warmth drive the input hard and use soft distortion to taste (which slightly confusingly is the hardest distortion).

    For well recorded vocals one of the vintage EQ models is all you need. Run them flat if they don’t need EQing. You can switch the output model in any of them — experiment to see which you like best.

    The graphic EQ is great for adding ‘air’. You can ‘tune’ the frequencies to get very high top ends which can add a lovely sheen to vocals.

    To add ‘Air’ set the detune to +12 and use the 32kHz band. Add too much drive to that for high end saturation — effectively an exciter.

  • thank you for your comments, must appreciated

  • @klownshed said:
    First places to start for warming up vocals without destroying them would be the compressor and vintage EQs

    Thank you for those tips.

  • @matdun25848834 said:
    thank you for your comments, must appreciated

    @dokwok2 said:

    @klownshed said:
    First places to start for warming up vocals without destroying them would be the compressor and vintage EQs

    Thank you for those tips.

    👍

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