You seem to have a lot better luck with getting the vocal into Synth V. I am still plugging away with it. Your video series has been much appreciated. I am determined to work with the new AI tools in an ethical way. Q: Do you like Pro Q better than Cubase Frequencies?
Yes, sometimes the extracted vocals sound like modulated mush! As for Pro Q v Freq, my thing is speed. The ergonomics of Pro Q are hard to beat (and why all new EQs have borrowed their design!). All the wannabe Pro Q killers have expanded their dynamics for more control... but honestly Pro Q's auto threshold/attack/release is superb!
Thanks for this series, nice to see what we can do with our own rendering of a Suno track! good job on that. I use Studio One for my production but I'm sure there will be similarities. Currently trying to do a mix of a country Suno track with some of the male SynthV voices but that is a bit challenging at the moment. Hard to emulate that southern accent, but working on it.
Yeah I used Synth V for BVs for my James Dupre remix - I had to rely 100% on the phonetic interpretation - no point typing "lie" when they're clearly singing "laaa" 😁
Yes, very useful Mark, thanks. 😎👍 I'm doing a similar thing, using various technologies to get a final produced song. It is quite a learning curve... I have finshed the first phase but it just doesn't sound right... the timing in SVS, and from my breakdown in Spectral layers. It's tough. 😒 Never Surrender! 😊😎
Thanks again for the great tutorial. I am trying to convert my shoegazer song created by udio in my own production. However, I am struggling in converting the drums and vocals into midi. Is there any VST available to extract the background vocals separately from the main vocals?
I'm not aware of anything that can separate layered vocals... yet! I've learned to never say never 😉 Spectralayers Pro can "sort of" separate two people speaking providing their voices are different and they are saying different words - I think it's geared at minimizing a second voice who may have started speaking under the main voice.
You seem to have a lot better luck with getting the vocal into Synth V. I am still plugging away with it. Your video series has been much appreciated. I am determined to work with the new AI tools in an ethical way. Q: Do you like Pro Q better than Cubase Frequencies?
Yes, sometimes the extracted vocals sound like modulated mush! As for Pro Q v Freq, my thing is speed. The ergonomics of Pro Q are hard to beat (and why all new EQs have borrowed their design!). All the wannabe Pro Q killers have expanded their dynamics for more control... but honestly Pro Q's auto threshold/attack/release is superb!
Thanks for this series, nice to see what we can do with our own rendering of a Suno track! good job on that. I use Studio One for my production but I'm sure there will be similarities. Currently trying to do a mix of a country Suno track with some of the male SynthV voices but that is a bit challenging at the moment. Hard to emulate that southern accent, but working on it.
Yeah I used Synth V for BVs for my James Dupre remix - I had to rely 100% on the phonetic interpretation - no point typing "lie" when they're clearly singing "laaa" 😁
Yes, very useful Mark, thanks. 😎👍
I'm doing a similar thing, using various technologies to get a final produced song. It is quite a learning curve... I have finshed the first phase but it just doesn't sound right... the timing in SVS, and from my breakdown in Spectral layers. It's tough. 😒
Never Surrender! 😊😎
Thanks again for the great tutorial. I am trying to convert my shoegazer song created by udio in my own production. However, I am struggling in converting the drums and vocals into midi. Is there any VST available to extract the background vocals separately from the main vocals?
I'm not aware of anything that can separate layered vocals... yet! I've learned to never say never 😉 Spectralayers Pro can "sort of" separate two people speaking providing their voices are different and they are saying different words - I think it's geared at minimizing a second voice who may have started speaking under the main voice.