: Adjust the input gain and compression threshold to match your specific microphone and voice. Key Matching
: Taming dynamics to make the voice sound consistent and present. : Reducing harsh "S" and "T" sounds (sibilance). Creative Effects : Reverb, delay, and saturation to add space and character. Why Use the -67 Style? Efficiency -67 vocal preset
Not -6, not -7, but minus sixty-seven. In the digital audio workstation, it sat at the very bottom of the dropdown menu, past the harmonic exciters and the de-essers, past the vintage tube emulations and the "Analog Warmth" that every bedroom producer slapped on their lo-fi beats. You had to scroll. Most people never did. : Adjust the input gain and compression threshold
If you boost 250Hz on a vocal that was already recorded in a boomy room, the -67 preset will sound like a blanket over a speaker. Creative Effects : Reverb, delay, and saturation to
In the "Vintage" section of Nectar's preset browser, you will find "Warm 67." It utilizes Nectar’s "Tape Saturation" module and their "Unmask" module to duck the lows of the beat around the vocal. Best for: All-in-one solutions.
A second voice. A younger one. A scream.