Nope. He used a talkbox (basically a speaker with a plastic tube attached
to it, which you stick in your mouth to modulate the tone). He describes it
in this interview:
http://www.radioundercover.com/framp3.html.
Same principle, though, modulating a sound source with another one.
Fun, but a tad over(mis?)used, like a bad photoshop filter. Enjoyed one of
the Daft Punk tracks with it, though (Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger ).
At least they mananged to push it to the point of the ridiculous...
____________________________
Christopher Sorg
Multimedia Artist/Instructor
csorg@enteract.com
http://csorg.cjb.net
quoted 26 lines -----Original Message-----
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Yonnie Lui [mailto:lui@interchange.ubc.ca]
> Sent: Friday, April 27, 2001 2:28 PM
> To: Chris Fahey
> Cc: idm@hyperreal.org
> Subject: RE: [idm] my red hot car - Autotune/Vocoder
>
>
> >Yeah, it's really sad. The new Squarepusher and the new Daft Punk albums
> >both use this vocoder thang, and although clearly the electronic
> music scene
> >(and for that matter the Electro Funk scene, going all the way
> back to Earth
> >Wind & Fire and Zapp) should "own" this sound, I can't help but
> think every
> >time I hear it "Oh, the Cher Effect".
>
> isn't Peter Frampton the one who introduced this vocoder effect ?
>
>
>
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