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How'd they do that
Credence-Suzie Q vocals
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Junior Member |
This is an oldie, but the clearest example of the effect I'm trying to figure out- In the middle of Credence's "Suzie Q" there is an effect on the vocals that sounds like a mic going thru a phase shifter, or he's holding his nose and singing thru a traffic cone....!
The part in the song where he sings "Say that you'll be true" is the sound I'm referring to. Quite a lot of bands use this effect on their vocals now, but this is the only clearcut example i can think of. Anybody have a clue? |
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Senior Member |
I'm not sure how they did it on Suzy Q, but a common way to get that sound is to sing through a small guitar amp using a low end microphone. I've gotten a similar effect using a harp player type setup. A Green Bullet mic through a cranked small tube amp.
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Senior Member![]() |
if you're referring to the overused "telephone" effect that folks are using nowadays, it's achieved by using either a bandpass filter (like a wah, but a little higher resonance) or a combination of high and lowpass filters.
Basically, you want to filter out all the highs and lows, leaving a relatively sharp frequency peak around 1KHz or thereabouts. Singing through an amp sounds cool too. You get the limited frequency response of a guitar amp, combined with a little overdrive. Listen to Sonic Youth's cover of the Carpenters' "Superstar" for this effect. Roger |
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Junior Member |
I'm glad someone was able to interpret what I meant by using the "suzie Q" description!
Yep! It IS high and low-pass filters (used nowadays)! I was at the music store today, checking out some effects trying to get a similar sound, using the Digitech Vocal 300 vocal Effects pedalboard, which had a "telephone" setting as well as a "megaphone" setting. The description in the Digitech manual sounded like what I wanted. but It sucked! We played around with the gates and the tones, for an hour, but the "megaphone" and "telephone"settings all sounded the same-cheesy. Then we traied a new Ibanez pedal-the L7 LoFi pedal. That was the one! It has high bandpass filters and low bandpass filters, which do the job almost to the letter. I hooked up a graphic equalizer in conjuntion with it, and there it was! "Oh Suzie Q!" Right on target Rogre! Thanks |
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Senior Member |
Yep, I happened to hear Suzy Q on the radio yesterday and it is more of that radical EQ cut than the small amp effect. The Suzy Q effect has more of that 'megaphone' effect.
Good call. |
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Celebrity![]() |
Might be where the Q comes from
I came in late on this one, but you can get this with Eq only, a good parametric Eqs allows you to filter at the same time as you'd boost or cut chosen frequencies. Glad you foudn a viabel solution for your need. Confessed Pickaholic! |
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Senior Member![]() |
Yes, the song was supposedly originally called "Sue's EQ"
I know. Not funny. Roger |
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Music Toyz.com Forum !
Music Toyz.com Forum !
How'd they do that
Credence-Suzie Q vocals
