7Mar
Sibilance is natural for almost every vocalist and is needed to understand speech.
Also, these vocal sounds contain a large proportion of high frequencies (thousands of Hertz). They originate in the mouth and by air passing around the teeth.
The relative proportions of these frequencies within a vocal recording are determined by many factors including the vocal style, the loudness of the performance, the frequency response of the microphone, the relative position of the microphone, and what type and amount of compression you’re dealing with.
Over the years I learned how to avoid excessive sibilance while recording vocals and even then sometimes is impossible to bypass this issue. Some vocalists have more sibilance than others and if you know them, you know how to respond the right way to his/her sibilance.
Here are some of my tools of the trade on how to avoid sibilance when recording vocals.
21Feb
Nowadays is more often to get vocal tracks and stems to mix in our studio produced and recorded in home studios. For the past two years, the world pandemic due to Covid19 has raised the difficulties and chances for artists to visit our studio and properly record their vocals in one of the most beautiful and acoustic-treated live rooms in the world, which is ours.
I know that getting vocals to sound right in a home studio environment will be always a challenge. To avoid falling into the same traps that many beginner producers do, I’ve put together 12 common mistakes in-home studio vocal production along with tips to resolve them.