RRP as Melodyne competitor?
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Reason has a very good pitch editor, rivaling Melodyne. An interesting idea I thought of, is that if the Reason Rack Plugin added audio tracks with pitch edit, that would be a very compelling feature, especially for Live, Bitwig and Reaper users (as they don't have built-in pitch editing), as they would essentially be getting Melodyne for free with Reason.
Interesting idea!
I really like the pitch editor inside Reason's sequencer, but in using Reaper, Melodyne 5 is way ahead. A lot more control, and they have rewritten the pitching algorithm. There's so much you can do , depending on which $edition of Melodyne you have. The Melodyne piano roll also tracks really well with the host daw sequencer.
I really like the pitch editor inside Reason's sequencer, but in using Reaper, Melodyne 5 is way ahead. A lot more control, and they have rewritten the pitching algorithm. There's so much you can do , depending on which $edition of Melodyne you have. The Melodyne piano roll also tracks really well with the host daw sequencer.
Reason’s pitch editing is good, but not great. there are times when it behaves really strangely, and you definitely have to be wary of artifacts cropping up (sometimes on stuff you’re not even actually changing).
personally, I’d rather the DAWs build their own pitch editors than relying on Melodyne or any other third party plugin. pitch editing is enough a pain in the ass as it is without having to fight against something that’s not tightly integrated with the DAW. I’m hoping Live is working on adding it, because that’s the only major feature that’s missing, for me.
personally, I’d rather the DAWs build their own pitch editors than relying on Melodyne or any other third party plugin. pitch editing is enough a pain in the ass as it is without having to fight against something that’s not tightly integrated with the DAW. I’m hoping Live is working on adding it, because that’s the only major feature that’s missing, for me.
That's because you haven't tried a plugin and DAW that both support ARA. Melodyne in Studio One is a plugin but behaves like it's built-in. It even appears in the S1 context menus. You edit pitch and timing right there in the audio editor. It's very clever technology and Melodyne is streets ahead of Reason's built-in editor. It's like comparing Windows Paint with Photoshop.
ARA is currently supported by Apple Logic Pro X, Steinberg Cubase and Nuendo, Presonus Studio One, Bandlab Cakewalk, Magix Samplitude Pro, Sequoia and Sound Forge, Cockos Reaper, Acoustica Mixcraft and Tracktion Waveform. Any bets on when Reason will support it?
There are not currently many ARA plugins but the ones that there are are the ones you want to be using for pitch and timing correction: Melodyne, AutoTune, VocAlign.
You have to seriously test melodyn against Reason's pitch editor, paying 300+ eur to get what reason has is nonsense compared to what melodyne gives you.
Reason's pitch editor is good, maybe at par with Melodyne for the most basic version, but compared to editor... i have my doubts.
Reason's pitch editor is good, maybe at par with Melodyne for the most basic version, but compared to editor... i have my doubts.
that’s true—I haven’t used any ARA2 plugins, but I’ve heard it’s definitely a much better workflow. the bet you’re taking is the biggest reason to advocate for integrated pitch editing in the DAWs (vs. the request to use Reason for pitch editing in RRP)—there’s almost no chance they’d do that to begin with, but doing it the right way, with ARA2 instead of the kludgy way some plugins work without, is exactly as laughable as you suggest—it ain’t going to happen.DaveyG wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021That's because you haven't tried a plugin and DAW that both support ARA. Melodyne in Studio One is a plugin but behaves like it's built-in. It even appears in the S1 context menus. You edit pitch and timing right there in the audio editor. It's very clever technology and Melodyne is streets ahead of Reason's built-in editor. It's like comparing Windows Paint with Photoshop.
ARA is currently supported by Apple Logic Pro X, Steinberg Cubase and Nuendo, Presonus Studio One, Bandlab Cakewalk, Magix Samplitude Pro, Sequoia and Sound Forge, Cockos Reaper, Acoustica Mixcraft and Tracktion Waveform. Any bets on when Reason will support it?
There are not currently many ARA plugins but the ones that there are are the ones you want to be using for pitch and timing correction: Melodyne, AutoTune, VocAlign.
even setting that aside, there are benefits to having pitch editing integrated within the DAW itself. the main ones are, there’s no separate upgrade path, or additional cost. no need to upgrade to Live 12 (now with ARA2 support!) AND buy Melodyne on top of that—and no need to pay another fee if you want to upgrade to Melodyne 6, then 7, etc.
but it’s good to know that ARA2 is a pretty seamless experience. I’m confident Ableton will add one or the other pretty soon, and I won’t hesitate to jump on whichever solution they go with (I just hope it’s the wallet-friendlier one).
Melodyne Essential is included with Studio One Pro. It's the entry level tier but still very capable, still better than Reason's pitch editing and is a proper licence so you can upgrade it if you choose.guitfnky wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021
even setting that aside, there are benefits to having pitch editing integrated within the DAW itself. the main ones are, there’s no separate upgrade path, or additional cost. no need to upgrade to Live 12 (now with ARA2 support!) AND buy Melodyne on top of that—and no need to pay another fee if you want to upgrade to Melodyne 6, then 7, etc.
I have melodyne and the differences are indiscernible to me. For small adjustments, both are great. For big adjustments, both are noticeable. As a Reason user, it's much easier for me to use Reason's pitch edit.
Just to note there is a significant difference in quality between Melodyne 4 and 5. If you thought Reason pitch shifting was as good as Melodyne 4 or earlier, and want something better, it's worth checking out v5. They rewrote the algorithm.
Also worth mentioning these tools are not AI, you do need to spend time learning them to get the best results. When one note is a way from the last one, there's a decision about how much vocal drift to preserve, and maybe manually cut a single syllable so you can repitch part of what Melodyne thought was a single word etc.
ARA is amazing for sure. In Reaper it is not seamless in the audio tracks suddenly are like Reason's pitch edit, but when you open the Melodyne plug in it opens it's own piano roll window with the audio, that tracks to the sequencer when playing back.
If you copy a section of audio and paste later in the song, it will copy all the Melodyne tweaks on the audio too.
Also worth mentioning these tools are not AI, you do need to spend time learning them to get the best results. When one note is a way from the last one, there's a decision about how much vocal drift to preserve, and maybe manually cut a single syllable so you can repitch part of what Melodyne thought was a single word etc.
ARA is amazing for sure. In Reaper it is not seamless in the audio tracks suddenly are like Reason's pitch edit, but when you open the Melodyne plug in it opens it's own piano roll window with the audio, that tracks to the sequencer when playing back.
If you copy a section of audio and paste later in the song, it will copy all the Melodyne tweaks on the audio too.
I'd really rather RS focus on quality-of-life stuff first, action shortcuts, hotkeys - that kind of thing. Like if I could pause with "spacebar" and the focus would stay on the exact spot I stopped it, and if I did it with "shift+spacebar" it would return me to the previously set position, instead of having to only choose ONE of these options through the menu, which I find both stupid and annoying. Or hotkeys for pitch edit/slice edit? Come on now... ARA support can wait, although how far RS are behind competition just makes you want to scream at them.
Melodyne is more advanced in that you can much more easily create a pitch-perfect (and natural-sounding) vocal line for a dance track or conveyor pop, like Ariana Grande. But even if you take a voice much more mature and intricate than Ariana Grande's and then edit it to be pitch-perfect, it looses all character and becomes absolutely indistinguishable from another. I can NEVER tell it's Ariana singing. It's completely plastic. It shouldn't even have a name. Hell, it's now hard to tell someone like Dua Lipa from Billie Eilish because of how similar their voices are processed. Eilish now writing songs about "copycats tryin to cop my manner", which I guess means poor posture, no glottal compression, low range, no diaphragmatic support and a cardioid mic preamp set all the way to burgundy. This happens when your "style" is based on technicalities instead of skill. I've heard singers who sound more like Billie Eilish than Billie Eilish at our local "Studio 44". But I digress...
Sibilance control in Melodyne is okay. $29 or whatever for the selig de-esser gets the same job done in even fewer clicks, just saying. And if you want manual control - you still go down and clickedy-click it all manually in either case.
In short, I like Reason pitch editor better precisely because of how rough, hammer-and-chisel it is, how it pushes you to sing better when your takes are garbage instead of 'fixing' your recordings. However, if I absolutely had to help out some disabled people and record some vocals as their dying wish (or if I were working in a studio and doing it for money) I would definitely go with Melodyne.
Melodyne is more helpful and quicker to get you to 'average', but it gets you no closer to the "top", than the Reason Pitch Editor. Think Al Green, Gladys and the Pips, Joe Cocker, Whitney Houston, Joplin, Winehouse, Jack White or even that dude who rapped in dissonants - Mac Miller. Doesn't matter if we're talking soft soul singing or belting rock. With vocal you can bend tone and make it harmonize at the beginning, middle or end of a phrase/a word or a single vowel, or go completely pitch-less or even dissonant and let the music harmonize. Melodyne's idea is that you can only bend the beginning or the end of a vowel, not the middle, (let alone messing with the other stuff I mentioned) which is correct mathematically, but not musically. On a more macro level, that's what Beatles or Nirvana were doing in music - going out of key and then harmonizing back in. That's what made it so memorable and distinguishable. We enjoy imperfection and most of the VST market is now built on selling us "vintage" and "analogue" dirt to bring back into the plastic-perfect digital sound.
Damn this didn't come out short at all...
another recap:
1) if you are a producer, and not a singer and want to get the material out in as fewer takes/time as possible - Melodyne is clearly better (but it will impede your progress as a singer)
2) if you are a singer/musician/composer who does a project all alone start-to-finish - Reason Pitch Editor, although technically worse, will serve your vocal skill better in the long run
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I really like Reason's pitch editor but it lacks the ability to use a midi lane as a guide.
If you could import a midi (usually channel 4) vocal lane into it an brute force the tuning to it or at least see it then I'd use it a lot more. As it is I find myself using Neptune because there's less steps to getting the right pitch from a ropey vocal.
If you could import a midi (usually channel 4) vocal lane into it an brute force the tuning to it or at least see it then I'd use it a lot more. As it is I find myself using Neptune because there's less steps to getting the right pitch from a ropey vocal.
@pushedbutton on twitter, add me, send me a message, but don't try to sell me stuff cos I'm skint.
Using Reason since version 3 and still never finished a song.
Using Reason since version 3 and still never finished a song.
What a great write up!! Very enjoyable read! Right there with you in your point that there is perfection in imperfection.EdwardKiy wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021I'd really rather RS focus on quality-of-life stuff first, action shortcuts, hotkeys - that kind of thing. Like if I could pause with "spacebar" and the focus would stay on the exact spot I stopped it, and if I did it with "shift+spacebar" it would return me to the previously set position, instead of having to only choose ONE of these options through the menu, which I find both stupid and annoying. Or hotkeys for pitch edit/slice edit? Come on now... ARA support can wait, although how far RS are behind competition just makes you want to scream at them.
Melodyne is more advanced in that you can much more easily create a pitch-perfect (and natural-sounding) vocal line for a dance track or conveyor pop, like Ariana Grande. But even if you take a voice much more mature and intricate than Ariana Grande's and then edit it to be pitch-perfect, it looses all character and becomes absolutely indistinguishable from another. I can NEVER tell it's Ariana singing. It's completely plastic. It shouldn't even have a name. Hell, it's now hard to tell someone like Dua Lipa from Billie Eilish because of how similar their voices are processed. Eilish now writing songs about "copycats tryin to cop my manner", which I guess means poor posture, no glottal compression, low range, no diaphragmatic support and a cardioid mic preamp set all the way to burgundy. This happens when your "style" is based on technicalities instead of skill. I've heard singers who sound more like Billie Eilish than Billie Eilish at our local "Studio 44". But I digress...
Sibilance control in Melodyne is okay. $29 or whatever for the selig de-esser gets the same job done in even fewer clicks, just saying. And if you want manual control - you still go down and clickedy-click it all manually in either case.
In short, I like Reason pitch editor better precisely because of how rough, hammer-and-chisel it is, how it pushes you to sing better when your takes are garbage instead of 'fixing' your recordings. However, if I absolutely had to help out some disabled people and record some vocals as their dying wish (or if I were working in a studio and doing it for money) I would definitely go with Melodyne.
Melodyne is more helpful and quicker to get you to 'average', but it gets you no closer to the "top", than the Reason Pitch Editor. Think Al Green, Gladys and the Pips, Joe Cocker, Whitney Houston, Joplin, Winehouse, Jack White or even that dude who rapped in dissonants - Mac Miller. Doesn't matter if we're talking soft soul singing or belting rock. With vocal you can bend tone and make it harmonize at the beginning, middle or end of a phrase/a word or a single vowel, or go completely pitch-less or even dissonant and let the music harmonize. Melodyne's idea is that you can only bend the beginning or the end of a vowel, not the middle, (let alone messing with the other stuff I mentioned) which is correct mathematically, but not musically. On a more macro level, that's what Beatles or Nirvana were doing in music - going out of key and then harmonizing back in. That's what made it so memorable and distinguishable. We enjoy imperfection and most of the VST market is now built on selling us "vintage" and "analogue" dirt to bring back into the plastic-perfect digital sound.
Damn this didn't come out short at all...
another recap:
1) if you are a producer, and not a singer and want to get the material out in as fewer takes/time as possible - Melodyne is clearly better (but it will impede your progress as a singer)
2) if you are a singer/musician/composer who does a project all alone start-to-finish - Reason Pitch Editor, although technically worse, will serve your vocal skill better in the long run
There's definitely a case here (and I think this is part of your point) that it's not about the tool, it's about the way you use it.
Just because we use a pitching tool, doesn't mean we want to suck the life out of the vocals, and we have to get past the marvel of 'correction' to get the right impact.
That said;
1. We're not all Eva Cassidy, and these other artists that are top of their game. A tool that with the right use can give us a leg-up is a great tool to have
2. Everything we do in production is abstracting from the raw character of the voice (or other instruments), not just pitch correction. The moment we start EQ'ing, compressing, even applying reverb, we are changing the original, and putting a spin on the sound that the artist may or may not have intended. Just like retouching a photo in photoshop starts the moment we change the levels. One can argue that we are making the picture / sound fake, but then it was fake the moment it was captured by a camera / microphone in the first place. Mixing and production is viewed by many as part of a mechanical process of getting a track as loud / as "pro" as possible but I see it is part of the interpretation process. I think Benedict Roff-Marsh explains this really well in his videos where he talks about mixing for the emotional intent of the track.
I (would like to) think there is a greater community of people these days that enjoy indie music rather than just the commercial successes. Part of this is because a lot of commercial music has become a lot more 'samey' and the indie music (including on this forum) is more individualised, exploratory, and not dumbed down by engineers/producers focused on the hitting charts and streaming counts.
I have v5, but I still use Reason's pitch edit. I can't hear a difference. They sound the same to me for small adjustments and for big adjustments they both sound unnatural. So with either, if it's not a small adjustment, I ask for a redo...
OK that's good to know. Kudos to the Reasontalk devs!
I'm sorry, but there are differences, specially when you start using Reason Pitch editor in non-vocal material. And I'm not talking about polyphonic material, but using it with a saxophone or a flute.
But even in vocals, reason ads a bunch of "artifacts" that make harder work more noticeable, it muffles high frequency material (grainy female vocals lose clarity) and even the smallest changes are noticeable. I still use it for good singers and small adjustments for the ease of the workflow (it's way faster than using Melodyne in Reason specially now that Melodyne does not support VST2 and you have to go through a bridge).
However where reason fails more is at the pitch recognition, where stuff goes out of octave and notes are badly recognized, tuning is quite difficult as it sometimes seems to not know what to do with some notes. I play recorder, flute, bagpipes, tin whistle, low whistle, bansuri, ocarinas, melodicas, harmonica... and i end up either repeating for the best performance possible or tune these with melodyne because reason pitch editor is a bit limited.
It also lacks mode/scale guidelines for ease when creating harmonies (they have the logic on Chords and Scales so why not put it on the Pitch editor?), and bigger jumps add more artifacts than Melodyne.
And finally, there's DNA in the higher versions (editor and Studio).
There's a big difference between a mature application focused on a given task that evolves coherently over time, and is the best of breed and an incomplete solution. At best, pitch edit was a good answer to the addition of similar things on Cubase and other daws.
So I'll say it again, price tag is different of course, and someone that is thinking about pitch editing and tuning, will think about melodyne and autotune.
my experience as wellmcatalao wrote: ↑01 Aug 2021I'm sorry, but there are differences, specially when you start using Reason Pitch editor in non-vocal material. And I'm not talking about polyphonic material, but using it with a saxophone or a flute.
But even in vocals, reason ads a bunch of "artifacts" that make harder work more noticeable, it muffles high frequency material (grainy female vocals lose clarity) and even the smallest changes are noticeable. I still use it for good singers and small adjustments for the ease of the workflow (it's way faster than using Melodyne in Reason specially now that Melodyne does not support VST2 and you have to go through a bridge).
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