

In short, there are multiple reasons for why you might want to try vocal presets. Some music makers use vocal presets as an instant gratification tool to get great vocals instantly, some music makers use it as a starting point (they edit the preset but have it do most of the heavy lifting), other music makers use it as a learning tool to learn how to mix vocals. Everyone’s voice is different and you can feel free to edit the settings if you wish. If you're thinking “But everyone’s voice is different, how can it mix MY voice”, you're right. Your vocal is already mixed to sound like whichever artist your new preset is designed to sound like. You can do this many times for separate pieces of audio for the one project.We create “vocal presets” which are essentially prebuilt channel strip settings that producers and artists can use to instantly sound like their favorite artists (think Gunna, Kid Laroi, Travis Scott).īasically how it works is you download one of the vocal presets on the site, drag them into FL Studio and then you're good to go. Now, like I said I have no experience with the other DAW's but after doing this a few times (with the help of Utoob tutorials if needed) I find it very easy and quick. Remember that the track you used in the mixer to record with edison at the start? Well you can there add your reverb or whatever you need to get it going and the vocal to sound how you like. You can now save this audio in a folder for later use or if you are currently doing all this in the project you want the audio to be used in then you can just bang it up to that project's playlist and get it into the right place for your song. You record straight into edison, assuming you have your audio input set to that mixer track and the mic plugged in !! then you sing and record, and then you can use the editor (edison) to normalize, trim or whatever needed to that audio file you have recorded. Edison is a wave editing plugin and is pretty neat, though probably much more simple that other wave editors out there these days. The way I record is by going to the mixer, pick a track and add edison as a plugin to that track. I also use it to record some outdoor sounds (birds etc) which I later edited down to individual files. I do however use FL 12 and I do record my own vocals for my tracks.

Thinking about ditching Pro Tools 9(Don't want to spend $$ to upgrade) and making FL my main DAW.Truth is I can't answer your question as I have no experience with Pro tools or cubase. Is it up there with Pro Tools, Cubase, Studio One Etc when it comes to tracking vocals or is it still better to be used for beat production. Since they came out with a brand new version of FL Studio, I was wondering were there any changes which made FL Studio more accessible for Vocal Recordings/Mixing.
