DIDC: Rap’s flyest Vocal effects (Sach O)
Sach O is a founding member of the Barbershop Quartet/Wu-Tang affiliate group “Chopping Headz”.
Love it or loathe it, much of the debate surrounding Kanye West’s 808s and Heartbreak revolves around his use of the autotune pitch correction pluggin. Detractors paint it as a corny, overused gimmick that barely conceals the fact that Mr. West’s voice is subpar at best. Others defend it as just another tool in the producer’s eclectic musical arsenal and rightly point out that West uses the software’s cold alienating effects for artistic, rather than commercial purposes. Both camps are sort of right, but sadly much of the discussion surrounding the program ignores the following.
1. Vocal Effects are nothing new
Go check an old Phil Spector production: it’s drenched in reverb. Zapp? Wanton abuse of the vocoder. The Beach Boys, Queen, Boys II Men and all? Multitracked to death. Using the studio to modify vocals is nearly as old as the recording studio itself.
2. There’s a Reason Rappers Don’t Modify Their Voices Much
Hip-Hop vocals are (for the most part) tough, direct and supposedly representative of an emcee’s skill. Punch ins and ghostwriters, accepted notions in other genres, are still contested in the court of rap. Outside of a few adlibs and some double tracking for thickness, we expect our emcees to sound the same in the studio as they would in a cipher.
3. Autotune sounds pretty cheap nowadays
Even the staunchest Kanye apologists have to admit that the preset effect has been overused in the past few years. At least Mr. West added distortion and a few other flourishes to his vocals, but the main reason that people are so tired of autotune is that artists are so damn uncreative with it. Most listeners found Snoop’s Sensual Seduction to be a dope/funny song since duke actually had a good reason to use it. Puffy’s upcoming album? I doubt that’ll be quite as effective.
That said, there have been quite a few notable vocal effects in the history of rap, many of which are primed for a comeback now that the doors have been kicked open. Here are some favorites.
4. “Chipmunk vocals”
Users: Nucleus, The Pharcyde, Quasimoto, Nas, Prince
Probably the most popular/obvious vocal effect in rap history, speeding your voice up on record has been around forever, probably because it’s so much fun. In emcee circles it’s been used mostly to create hilarious alter egos and sidekick characters, from Nucleus’s bro Cosmo to Pharcyde’s Farmer Man to Madlib’s Quasimoto to Nas and Prince’s err…cross dressing fantasies.
5. “Dubbed out park jam echo”
Users: Rakim, Nas, anyone who’s ever rocked a shitty system
Dub vocals are a remnant from the early days of rocking the mic when an emcee had to cut through everything from crowd noise to cheap mics to muddy sound systems. Combined with homemade effects boxes provided by DJs inspired by Jamaican dub clashes, the results are wonderfully warm instant adlibs that gave a touch of authenticity to any song. My personal favorite example? The crazy vocals at the end of Nas’s “Represent”. What the fuck were they saying anyways?
6. “Chopped-n-screwed
7. “Rhyming over the phone”
Users: emcees on “up north trips”, The Firm, CNN, rappers with concepts.
A rapper “phoning in” his rhymes is rarely an aesthetic choice and is usually the result of an unfortunate incarceration but occasionally heads will resort to the tinny, lo-fi phone effect for artistic purposes…usually for songs about being incarcerated.
8. “The 2$ distorted mic”
Users: The Juice Crew, The Beastie Boys, other white people.
This one went out of style with P-Funk samples, Eddie Bauer and grunge. Early records by Big Daddy Kane, Biz Markie and other NY emcees were recorded on the cheap and the vocal takes bordered on demo quality, which actually worked quite well given the rough nature of the material. A few years later the Beasties bought cheap radioshack mics for Check Your Head in a punk inspired move that caused nearly every subsequent rap-rock group to record their lead singer using the latest in cheap-ass technology. This one can stay dead.
Stumble It!

December 9th, 2008 at 10:37 am
A rapper “phoning in” his rhymes is rarely an aesthetic choice…
How soon we forget Kanye calling Talib up to impress some girls with birth control stuck to their arm like Nicorette.
December 9th, 2008 at 11:08 am
If more songs sounded like So Whatcha Want I’d be fine with that
December 9th, 2008 at 1:02 pm
Ah man, some Perry Bible Fellowship! I went to college with that dude.
December 9th, 2008 at 1:45 pm
Brilliant work, man.
And a good reminder about how great “Phone Tap” was.
I loved when Black Milk used the Quas effect for “Give The Drummer Sum”.
The vocal effect amounts to an aesthetic choice, , and it’s fascinating to look at the all the different uses of it throughout the years.
December 9th, 2008 at 4:12 pm
I liked 808s for the most part, but I really don’t understand why people are using superlatives when talking about kanye’s use of autotune. Why is everyone talking as if ye’s taking autotune to bold new frontiers? What are these frontiers?
Personally T-Pain autotune> Ye autotune. Yeah, its a technological boost, but Pain doesn’t seem the least bit embarassed by it. Nor does he pretend like there’s some sort of symbolic “this conveys the desolation of my soul” reason for its use. He just layers autotune on autotune, and just totally hams it up for total pop domination. Is there anything as great as ‘Buy you a drink’ on 808s?
December 9th, 2008 at 4:21 pm
“Is there anything as great as ‘Buy you a drink’ on 808s?”
No.
December 9th, 2008 at 4:34 pm
as someone said already; more Whatcha Want-esque tunes = good news to me.
personally i’ve a big fan of the $2 mic “effect”… Enter 36 Chambers is kinda like that… maybe $5… but out of all these that is the coolest for sure. the biggest problem with autotune is that it makes you sound like cher. i dont know why any rapper would want that.
December 9th, 2008 at 5:53 pm
Since when is “Buy You A Drank” good?
December 9th, 2008 at 6:38 pm
Roger Troutman used a talk-box, not a vocoder. The vocoder ’sound’ is like the chorus of “Planet Rock”, it actually replaces elements of the vocal sound with synthesized tones. The Zapp talk-box sound is literally just a tube that re-amplifies sound through the musician’s mouth.
Sorry to get all nerdy on ya, I just see this misconception over and over and the whole talk-box/vocoder/auto-tune thing has become a serious pet peeve over the last couple of months.
December 9th, 2008 at 9:55 pm
“Since when is “Buy You A Drank” good?”
I would go so far as to say it’s the best pop single of the past two years. Nothing this year has really compared. Least of all T-Pain’s own crappy shit.
December 9th, 2008 at 10:01 pm
That is a lot far. Then again, I compared Madlib to Miles Davis today so who am I to talk?
At least you realize T-Pain sucks now.
December 9th, 2008 at 11:08 pm
Backseat Action is better than Buy You A Drank though.
December 11th, 2008 at 10:12 am
Lil Danzig: good looks on the talk-box clarification.
Re: 2$ Mics. Yeah when it works its gold but I still remember the horrors of the rap-rock era and those kids ruined that shit for me.
Now that I think about it, one guy who ALWAYS has dope vocals is Black Thought on Roots records. 75 Bars this year had the perfect grimy tone.
December 11th, 2008 at 9:43 pm
I mean, what pop singles have you liked the past two years? There haven’t been a ton of good ones.
December 11th, 2008 at 9:54 pm
Who can even define what pop is and isn’t anymore?
Paper Planes is “pop.” That’s good. Everything Kanye does is pop, that’s good.
December 11th, 2008 at 11:29 pm
Well okay, Paper Planes was aight… I enjoyed absolutely none of the Graduation singles (maybe Champion’s alright?) and I can only give a B+ to Love Lockdown, so I’m happy to take Buy You A Drank over Kanye. Flashing Lights is the laziest house record I’ve ever heard and his raps on that are worse than the dude’s on La Bouche’s “Be My Lover.” Seriously.