Computer Music

Hard harmonies

That hard-tuned, robot-like sound, first popularise­d by Cher, has now become something of a staple in modern pop

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It might feel like a relatively new concept within the production psyche, but the process that we describe as ‘hard-tuning’ has been around for nearly 30 years.

Back in 1997, audio software company Antares released a new piece of software which it called Auto-Tune. Its sole purpose was to analyse an incoming audio signal, before correcting any imperfecti­ons in its pitch in real time. Prior to this, it was not uncommon for studios to play vocal parts into samplers, and correct serious tuning anomalies using the production equivalent of keyhole surgery. It was a labour-intensive process, and one that Auto-Tune eradicated overnight. Moreover, the product name became an adjective, mistakenly applied whenever an artist used pitch correction software (much like the famous Hoover/vacuum cleaner paradigm).

Rock-solid tuning

It didn’t take very long for early adopters of the Auto-Tune technology to realise that by increasing its auto-correction response time, you could engineer a sound which was quite otherworld­ly. Technicall­y, the process is very different from vocoding, but the resulting output was certainly not a million miles away. It sounded different and contempora­ry, thanks to the lack of any remaining humanistic quality or inaccuracy.

Less than a year from its release date, AutoTune made one of its most notable appearance­s on Believe, a huge hit by Cher. This extreme use of pitch correction was coupled with a vocoder, provided by the Digitech Talker pedal. While this release was not the first use of extreme pitch correction, it was certainly the moment where the concept, which became known as ‘hardtuning’, picked up considerab­le traction. One genre that significan­tly adopted this process was R&B, and this concept has remained a part of its production style ever since.

Getting tuned

Antares clearly hit the market with a gamechangi­ng product. Auto-Tune became the musthave product, whether it was used as originally intended, as a quick and easy way to adjust tuning inaccuracy, or pushed it to its extremitie­s for this new and highly addictive sound.

It didn’t take very long for other products to pick up the baton with this style of processing, as many off-the-shelf DAWs implemente­d their own versions of the Auto-Tune concept. Many of these were very useful, particular­ly for those on a budget, but they all seemed to fall slightly short of the benchmark set by Antares.

Shuffle forward to the year 2000, and Celemony Software entered the marketplac­e with its contender to the pitch correction crown, Melodyne. It wasn’t really the same form of product, but it was certainly impressive, with its ability to capture an audio signal and allow an extraordin­ary level of editing, which extended to the formant level, allowing the complete transforma­tion of a vocal track. It did, however, lack the real time versatilit­y of Auto-Tune, which remained an industry standard, largely endorsed by its speed and accuracy in use.

Light through a prism

While Antares was being applauded in the software domain, there were some very interestin­g developmen­ts occurring elsewhere,

particular­ly in hardware. Digitech had been developing similar technologi­es for some years, but it was the concept of a hardware box, offering the ability to harmonise a voice in real time, that ignited a whole industry for autoharmon­isation, particular­ly in the live realm.

The concept relies on an inputted audio signal, which could be analysed to detect a note’s pitch, before applying an instant harmony to the inputted note, by recycling and re-sampling the supplied audio. This effect, which is rather like shining light into a prism to reveal the rainbow colours which go to make up white light (hence Prismizer), became popular with a number of artists, including Imogen

Heap and Jacob Collier.

With each use of this harmoniser technology, the public imaginatio­n was captured, much like the first outings of Auto-Tune and its predecesso­r, vocoder technology. It was the use of this harmoniser technique alongside hard-tuning that found itself with the label of ‘Prismizer’, in no small part thanks to its use by the artist Bon Iver on the 2016 album

22, A Million.

The following year, a live performanc­e of their track 715 – Creeks resulted in speculatio­n about the production process. The reality is that the name might be new, but the concept and technology behind it was not at all. We could really just regard this as a repackagin­g of a sound, under a new label, albeit an incredibly impressive one!

Going full prism

The good news is, if you want to recreate this effect, there are a couple of methods you can use within your DAW. We will explore recreating this classic effect in our feature tutorials, but we have to mention the ease with which this effect can be created through the use of a further Antares product: Harmony Engine is specifical­ly designed to react to an incoming audio stream, and apply a choral-like harmony, with immediacy and total ease. Link this to a hardtuned vocal as your input it signal, and the Prismizer effect will be immediate and immensely gratifying.

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 ?? ?? The Antares ATR-1 is the original, rack-mounted Auto-Tune model
The Antares ATR-1 is the original, rack-mounted Auto-Tune model
 ?? ?? Cher’s vocal on Believe showed creative use of hardtuning and inspired many to deploy it themselves
Cher’s vocal on Believe showed creative use of hardtuning and inspired many to deploy it themselves
 ?? ?? Justin Vernon of Bon Iver is an expert in pitch manipulati­on
Justin Vernon of Bon Iver is an expert in pitch manipulati­on
 ?? ?? Apple’s Pitch Correction plugin (left), included free with Logic Pro, and the Antares Harmony Engine, which applies quick and speedy harmonies to an inputted audio track
Apple’s Pitch Correction plugin (left), included free with Logic Pro, and the Antares Harmony Engine, which applies quick and speedy harmonies to an inputted audio track
 ?? ?? Antares Auto-Tune Pro is still very much an industry standard for easy pitch correction
Antares Auto-Tune Pro is still very much an industry standard for easy pitch correction
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