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Chris Higgins
Know Your Meme: Auto-Tune
by Chris Higgins - November 12, 2009 - 1:43 PM

The Know Your Meme Blog has a great introduction to the history and technology behind Auto-Tune, the audio effect first introduced in 1997 and made popular when Cher’s single “Believe” made heavy use of the effect in a way that was never intended — emphasizing the warbling of pitch correction rather than simply using it to sweeten slightly sour notes. A bit from Know Your Meme’s article:

With the expense of the Antares Auto-Tune plugin and the relative lack of social networking sites at the time, Auto-Tune remained something of a trade secret among many record producers who simply wanted to save time in the studio.

But as social communities, user-generated content, video tutorials, and open-source software development proliferated online in recent years, so did the availabilty, usage, and experimentation of Auto-Tune.

In 2005, rapper T-Pain made his debut with the album Rappa Ternt Sanga. The album used Auto-Tune heavily, on every song; giving T-Pain his signature sound. His first single Sprung can be viewed here, although embedding has been disabled.

This fun video (featuring “Professor” Weird Al Yankovic) has further explanation:

Read the whole article here (includes a bunch of embedded videos showing the historical moments along Auto-Tune’s journey). See also: the latest “Auto-Tune The News” episode, featuring Kanye and Ballon Boy.

Previous coverage of Auto-Tune on mental_floss: The World of Auto-Tune, “Cosmos” Documentary, Auto-Tuned Vocals by Carl Sagan, ft. Stephen Hawking (Seriously), and Winston Churchill Getting Funky.

Comments (1)
  1. yo chris, imma let you finish, but know your meme is the best informational vid of all time! ALL TIME!

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