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Part 10 of 28 “Loose Ends” Single Series: Recording
Breeze Ready Or Not
Well Thought Out
In preparation from the day before, today for Breeze is a little easier to get into. Breeze mostly worries about the sound of his voice and how it translates into the mic.
The hardest thing to get comfortable with Breeze feels for any artist is to hear his own music come through the speakers. Breeze gets comfortable with it after so much practice but does the fan’s like how he sound?
Are there enough bars for the first verse and throughout the verses? Should breeze extend the beat or try a different voice?
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Exploration
One of the most fun things to have is Ad Libs or not have ad-libs. That really all depends on the song and how having or not having can complete any type of Breeze track.
When recording, you also learn about if your lyrics come outside a bar and if it can fit. Surprising, in this part of the process Breeze learns a lot more about the song than any other step.
Within the exploration step, Breeze learns if he wants to add a different rift to the 808 or hit hats. Here Breeze learns if he should change his vocal octave to lower or higher.
Adding BackUp Vocal
Breeze depending on the song type would add different types of back up vocals. Breeze may have 3 or even 4 types of vocals for the chorus or the verse.
Breeze would some times just add more of the same vocal at the same pitch and pan them left and right to make the vocal stronger. Sometimes this is also done to make the vocal sound wider.
Breeze makes the adjustment to the vocals to add harmonies to any vocal so it can touch all frequencies. Breeze also add different effects to the backup vocals to make it sound different than other verse to keep the listener entertained.
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