This is the vocal sample that I’ll be using to run through VocalSynth 2. It animates in response to the audio signal.Ĭheck out our article on iZotope’s Ozone if you don’t already have it. Only the modules selected will show up in the graphic. Each letter represents one of the five modules. The Anemone is the coolest visual aspect of VocalSynth 2.
#Torrent izotope vocalsynth 2 mod
These are Distort, Filter, Transform, Shred, Delay, Ring Mod and Chorus. There’s also a bunch of effects, “Stomp box effects” as iZotope describes them. Great for adding background singers to a chorus, or a distant choir for an ambient effect. Especially useful if your vocalist isn’t available and you only have the 1 take.Īdditionally, the Polyvox can add a choir type effect. The slight variance will be closer to a vocalist doing 2 takes. Keep the original vocals, and put this on a second track with tuned vocals. But, rather than fix the vocalists’ tuning, this can be useful as a doubler. It can offer pitch correction, if you don’t already have a way to do that. The final module is the Polyvox, and possibly the most useful module.
(This and the Vocoder were the Baby Boomber/Gen X version of the AutoTune effect.) Kidding aside, this can be useful as a doubler on a second track. Not sure how useful it is for a current sound, but perhaps it’s time to introduce the younger generation to this awesome effect. Aerosmith, Peter Frampton, Bozz Scaggs, Bon Jovi, etc.
The fourth module is a talkbox, and this can be very useful for a Classic Rock vocalist. It’s designed for glitch effects and computized sounds. The third module is called CompuVox, and personally I’ve had the hardest time finding this useful on vocals, but I could just be missing something.