Stuff You Should Know - Selects: How Auto-Tune Works
Episode Date: January 2, 2021What began as a challenge to an oil engineer to make a terrible singer into a pitch-perfect one, Auto-Tune has become a ubiquitous (and, to many, obnoxious) part of the musical soundscape. Learn more ...in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everybody, it's your old pal Josh and for this week's SYSK Selects, I've chosen how AutoTomb
works. Came out in August of 2015 and it's one of my under the radar favorites because it looks
at something that's worked its way into every crevice of popular culture. But that none of us
really has any idea about how it works or where it came from. And this episode is a special listener
male roundtable with us and Holly and Tracy from Stuff You Missed in History class all about sexism.
It's super interesting and really kind of out of left field after the AutoTune episode. So it's a
nice combination and I hope you enjoy it. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart
radio's How Stuff Works. Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck
Bryant. Yep. There's Jerry. Yep. And this is Stuff You Should Know. That was great. Thanks man. Do I
sound like Cher? You sound like T. Payne, T. Josh, T. Josh. Or Snoop Dogg. Does he do AutoTune?
He factors into this big time later on. Oh wow. I don't even know about that. Oh I've got some
up my sleeve. This is kind of fun. I don't know how much we're going to do that because people are
probably like stop it right now. Oh Chuck, I think we should do it a lot. Are you done? Yeah, I'm
done. We could have just AutoTuned this whole thing. Yeah. You know? Maybe we should. Maybe we
should. Maybe from this moment forward we should just AutoTune the rest of the episode. Yeah. Starting
now. Let's sabotage our careers. You got an intro for this? A fancy intro? I think we just did it
buddy. Oh okay, well let's get in the way back machine then my friend. Okay, we don't have to go
back that far because I know where we're going. It's gonna be a short trip. Let's go back to oh
summer of 1998. Boom. I'm you and I are in the club. We're hanging out. We're drinking rum and
Coke. You can find us in the club. And we're dancing. We're getting down and grooving to
to Cher's latest jam. Believe. Believe. It's a hot jam. A hot hot hot jam that's released in the
summer. It's summertime as you can tell because it's hot in the club. Yeah and I've got on my
my short pants. I'm dressed like I'm out for a night at the Roxbury. That's right. I am wearing
a see-through mesh shirt. So I noticed actually. How did you not? Well yeah, the third nipple
really stands out. So we're in the club. We're jamming and Cher's song is on and something
happens at about 35 seconds into the song and you and I are just like whoa daddy. Did you just
hear that? It changed everything. It changed the whole tone of the club. Like the club was like okay
now it's banging. Yeah. The hook. Yeah. Because of a little something called autotune.
What sounded like a little electronic glitch was very purposeful and it was the first time
the autotune had been used in this way. So what Josh is autotune?
Well that was quite a setup. Yeah. Can we do the rest of the episode in the club?
Yeah why not. Okay. Just keep those rum and coke coming. Okay. That's cool. So Chuck let me stop you
for a second right? Okay. Because the way you described it you made it sound like everybody
was like oh Cher just used autotune. No no. No. Everybody said what was that? Yeah. That was
awesome. Although some people were like what was that? Don't ever do that again. Sure. But most
people were like wow Cher just released her biggest hit of her entire career and it was a pretty long
career. Yeah. She just came back like that just established her comeback was this track. Yep.
And it actually became one of the greatest best-selling singles of all time. Yeah and I think
I mean it would have been a probably a big song anyway but I think most definitely autotune
kicked it into the stratosphere. It gave it just that extra something. It didn't and it became part
of the the the talk. Everyone was talking about it. So everybody went to her producer and said dude
how did you do that? We want to know how to do that and he's like vocoder. Yeah he lied. He lied.
He lied big time. He lied in person to other producers. He lied in interviews. He lied lied
lied about how he made that track because he wanted to keep it to himself because it was so
huge and it became so huge Chuck that at first autotune was called The Share Effect. Yeah. Even
the company that produced autotune and Terry's which we'll talk about in a minute called it in
their instructional book The Share Effect. They probably still do don't they? They don't mention
it any longer. Oh really? Yeah okay. But the the so it was a it was a huge deal and this guy lied
and kept it under wraps and for many years it was very mysterious. Yeah let's actually if you
live under a rock well let's go ahead and play that clip of the very first 35 seconds into that
song where Cher says I can't break through. Yeah right there. Boom right there. Music changed
from that point forward. Okay so for the worse. What this guy, what her producer was saying
was vocoder. Vocoder is something that's been around for a very long time. If you've ever
listened to any Pete Frampton, Peter Frampton, and he sings Do You Feel Like We Do? Yeah.
That whole long guitar solo or whatever. He's breathing into a tube connected to his guitar
which is electrifying his voice. Vocoder been around for a very long time. Yeah. But there's
different ways of doing it. That was definitely the the the tube effect through the guitar but you
can also just use it to you know make your voice robotic like Beck. Sure. Two turntables
and a microphone. Right. Or Mr. Roboto with sticks. Yeah. But all different ways to use it.
This thing, this sounded different, this share effect. It was a little different. Sure. And I
wonder how this guy talked his way out of like the lie. Yeah. I mean like if a producer was like
okay well show me how you did it on vocoder. If he was like over here and then just like ran out
of the room. I don't think he talked his way out of it. I think he was just another lying music
producer. Okay. And he was just like oh okay well busted. Okay. So apparently along the way
people figured out here, there what this guy did in 1998 with Believe. And they started using it
themselves but very, very sparsely. All right. So Josh, what is autotune? All right. I'll answer
your question because I'm going to keep asking it. All right. So autotune is a plugin originally
released in 1997 for the audio editing software Pro Tools. Yeah. It's a software piece that allows
you and the original intent and how it's still mostly used is to pitch correct a singer's voice.
Right. So when you or I go into the studio to record those albums that we'll never release
but we just record for fun. We hit flat notes here or there. Oh not me. I have perfect pitch.
I hit flat notes here or there. I don't have perfect pitch. And everybody does. It's a normal
thing. Sure. For most of eternity music producers would say blue eyes, chairman, I need another
take. That was a great take but you had a couple of flat notes. Give me another take just like
that one. Then Frank would finish his scotch, put out a cigarette and say you get one more.
Shine head. What was the... Oh, you didn't even see spinal tap, did you? Yeah. You finally saw it?
Finally. Oh, okay. But I don't remember any Frank Sinatra trip. Yeah. That was when Bruno Kirby
is the limo driver. He talks about Sammy Davis' book Yes, I Can and he says what they should
have called it is Yes, I Can as long as Frank says it's okay because Frank called the shots for
all those guys. I do remember that. Yeah. So Frank would sing one more take and this could be like
take 12 or 15 or 20 depending on how much the person was feeling it. The singer was feeling
it at the time and would be happy to hang around the studio. Whatever was keeping the
singer there at the studio, as long as that was around, the singer was happy to give it one more
try. One more try, right? Like drugs maybe. Okay. Or if they had like a really good candy bowl.
Sure. Who knows? I got to stay for the Skittles. So the editor then or the music producer would
then take all of these different tracks and would go through and I can't imagine how awful this would
be. Take the best part of this track and edit it together with the best part of that track. Yeah.
And like we're talking like pre-digital era. So like they're splicing together tape. Sure.
From what I understand. Yep. Right. To get the best possible complete take. Right. Piece together
from many different takes. Yeah. Right. So okay, that's what they did. All of a sudden in 1997,
there's this new software that just runs through a take and says, oh, well, I see what note or what
key the singer is singing in, but this particular note's just a little out. So I'm going to nudge it
into the key that the singer was going for. And now all of a sudden one take is all it takes.
Yeah. I mean, what it did was it cut down on studio time, which is super expensive. Yeah.
Which is very appealing because now you could churn out songs that are a more rapid rate and
a cheaper rate. And it was a little sort of a secret tool that they didn't intend to like get
out to the public. I don't think they wanted everyone to know this stuff. No. It was meant for
professionals. Yeah. And basically it was just a, it was the musical audio equivalent of cosmetics.
Yeah. Doctor, it was invented by Dr. Harold Andy Hildebrand. And he likened it to makeup and the
New Yorker likened it to like getting rid of a red eye and a photograph. Exactly. It was just,
you use it just enough so that you can't tell it's there, but it makes for a more pleasant
overall composition, right? Yeah. What Cher had done or what Cher's producers had done is take
this thing and used it to the nth degree. Yeah. Supposedly it was just a joke and Cher was like,
I love that, but that's like, I don't know if that's an urban legend or if that's fact. Well,
from what I read that her producer, she was, she wanted like, she had heard like some telephone
effect that she was interested in using. Like she wanted something. Oh, okay. And I guess the producer
had stumbled upon that and played it for her, but it was like, you're not going to like this,
but listen to this weirdness. And she was like, that, I want that. Nice. That's what I read.
Well, if it's due to her giving it the green light, then that was truly like foresight,
like a masterful move by Cher, you know? Well, Cher has a lot of foresight. You know,
they say don't, don't doubt Cher and Cher has a lot of foresight. Never bet against Cher. Yeah.
So when she did make that decision, it changed, like you said, it changed everything.
And we'll, we can't talk enough about this, but we're going to take a break
and then come back and talk more about it. Right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh God.
Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man.
And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story
of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to
listen. So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on
the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangeh Shatikhar
and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of
my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get second hand
astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop
running and pay attention, because maybe there is magic in the stars. If you're willing to look for
it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric
curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had
a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology,
it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the I Heart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, Josh. What I found most interesting about this while researching was what Andy
Hildebrand did before he did this. He was a musician. He played flute professionally
since he was a young teenager, even went to University of Illinois fighting Illini on a music
scholarship. Yet he chose to work for Exxon Mobil for 17 years looking for oil.
Yeah, crazy. The two weren't too terribly far apart, right? Well, as we will find out.
So he's a professional floutist, classically trained floutist, a good one from what I understand.
Flout and his flute. Yes. And he went to college to get an electrical engineering degree, I think.
And basically, when he went to work for the oil companies, it was an oil exploration.
And he figured out a program where he designed a software that when you set off an explosive
charge underground, it measured the pitch of the sound waves that were created, right?
So as they travel through rock, different types of rock adjust the pitch, basically.
And this software analyzed the pitch that was coming through and could create a subsurface
map of the rock below. And oil companies have long known that this type of rock is associated
with oil and this type of rock is not. Maybe you'll find natural gas in this type of rock.
So with this guy creating an audio visual map of the subsurface area, oil companies no longer
had to just drill and hope that they found oil. He would say, this is a pretty great place to
drill because this kind of rock is there. That's right. It's called Auto Correlation and it saved
Exxon a lot of money and he somehow made a lot of money. I thought it was going to be one of
those things where Exxon was just like, thanks, you work for us. Here's your $45,000 a year.
But apparently he earned enough money to retire by the age of 40, thanks to this innovation.
And in the early 1990s, he got out of the oil business and founded...
It's like it's just a popularity contest.
He founded Interus Audio Technologies in kind of near Silicon Valley in Scots Valley,
California. And I think still they only have about 10 employees. I think it's a pretty small
operation. And it's all centered around him and his ideas and inventions. Yeah, he is the main
inventor. One of the first things he invented was something called Infinity, which is a program
where you could loop samples over and over and over seamlessly. Apparently that was a necessary
thing. I didn't know that. Oh yeah, think about it. We're talking like early 90s. That was like the
808 acid house revolution. Yeah, but I just didn't realize. I guess he made it easier probably.
Is my guess. Yes, I think he enabled it. He enabled techno is the impression I have. Oh,
really? Yeah, interesting. Looping samples together seamlessly. Well, but you could already do that.
What I'm saying is he clearly found a way to do it better and more efficiently. He didn't invent
looping. No, he made it better. Yeah, exactly. Another thing he did was invented the microphone
modeler. Modeling is a big thing in music. You can get guitar amplifiers that model basically
means imitate other amps. I have a modeling amp, which I don't use anymore because it's
not very good, but it models. There's like 12 different classic amps it models supposedly. Oh,
nice. But he invented the modeling microphone, which means you could mimic like classic microphones
or like a harmonica mic and vintage mics like the Elvis Presley that cool looking mic. I'm sure
that was on there. Oh, is that the silver kind of rounded rectangular one? Noel's got one on his
desk. Yeah, that's associated with Elvis Presley. Well, I mean, just the music of that time. I got
you. But I always picture Elvis. I can see that. Yeah. Have you ever seen his grandson, by the way?
Quicksidebar? No. His name is Quicksidebar. Yeah. Quicksidebar Presley. It's weird name. Yeah.
But you know, Lisa Marie was his mom. Oh, yeah. That was very funny, by the way.
He just look him up. I think what's his name? I can't remember his name. His last name is
the father's name for Lisa Marie's first husband is who she had him with. Oh, okay.
Okay. Yeah, just look at Elvis Presley's grandson. It is creepy, dude. Looks exactly like Elvis at
that age. Like scary, scary, eerily similar. Can he sing? That I don't know. Does he use
autotune? That I do know. If he sings, he probably uses autotune. Probably. Because 90% of singers
apparently use autotune. I've seen even higher than that. Really? Yeah. How about that? 90%
admit it. Yeah, there's a thing about autotune where you deny that you use it even though you're
totally aware that everyone uses it. I read an article where apparently this one producer said
that he's worked with two artists that haven't used it. Everyone else has. It was Nico Case and
Nelly Furtado. And then apparently later after that Nelly Furtado released a single that had
tons of autotune on it. Nico Case remains solid. She may be the only artist in the world who hasn't
used autotune either subtly or to the nth degree. Well, that's certainly not true. I think there
are plenty of indie artists, but if you're talking... You should read this Verge article. It basically
lays it out like, no, everyone uses this. Even if... So apparently producers don't even necessarily
tell the band that it's being used right then because there's a live function so that the
monitors or the headphones that the band is hearing is being run through autotune. So what
their hearing is already corrected. So they think they just did a perfect take. Yeah. I'm just wary
of any time someone says out of 20 million singers, one person doesn't. That's just very dubious
claim. I don't know. We're talking music industry here. Especially when a lot of people are making
their own music in their own homes. Well, that's another thing too. They're not a part of the
pop machine. They don't have stats on that. I'm just saying that sounds like a load of garbage
to me. Okay. I'm sure more than one person doesn't use autotune. It's just one. So autotune came
about. Apparently, this is the tale because of a dinner that Hildebrand was at. He was
having lunch with a sales rep and the wife said something funny like, hey, Andy, can you
why don't you invent something to make me sing in tune? And he went, oh, great idea.
That's a great Hildebrand. We should have autotuned that. Maybe we could. Maybe it was. Maybe it
just happened. And so he said, you know what? If I can tell Jed Clampett where the oil is,
then I can make you sing in tune. And he did. And he did. He created autotune. We've kind of
mentioned how it works. Basically, it takes that take of a singer's song. It takes the vocals of
a song. And you select what key you're singing in. And then autotune goes through and makes this
map of that audio or that vocal track. And it goes through and says, oh, this one's a little
flat. This one's a little low or whatever. And it just nudges these things into tune,
into the key that it's supposed to be in. So all of the notes that the singer hits in that take
are within the correct key, meaning that they all sound great. It's a perfect take, right?
Well, yeah. And the key there is it's in the original tone and inflection of the artist.
So you can't tell it's happening. No. And there's actually, if you look at the
autotune product demo videos, it's amazing. So there's an automatic version where you select
the key and let autotune do its thing. And it does a pretty great job. One of the ways that
it does this is it adds like millisecond pauses in between notes. There's little spaces between
notes, which gives it a natural feel. There's other selections that you can make like throat
length. You can select how long the singer's throat is. And you can do that note by note.
So you can make the whole thing even more natural until basically what you've done is taught autotune
how to simulate a particular singer's singing style and voice so that when it adjusts that note,
it does it within the same exact range that the singer would have done had they hit it correctly.
It's pretty amazing in advanced stuff. Oh, totally.
But when normal people think of autotune like you and me who are not in the music biz,
we think of this thing that's called the zero function.
Yes. And you know what? Let's take a break and we will explain what the zero function is right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road. Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll
be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that,
Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step
by step. Oh, not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking
this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody about my new
podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, kpop. But
just when I thought I had to handle on the sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. The suspense is killing me. You're going to kill us.
All right. Zero function. That was essentially what the share effect was.
Okay. Yes. Go ahead. No, no, go ahead. No, no, go ahead. You just sat up in your chair like you
were about to arm wrestle. I know. I've been, do you go ahead? Do you talk about it, buddy?
Well, what autotune does in terms of the zero function is, is it gets rid of all of that space
and when shares voice changes, it's immediate. Yeah. All of those notes go right up against
each other and it creates this robotic sounding voice. Yeah. There's no like rise. It's not like a,
what's the word I'm looking for? It's, it's not like a normal vibrato that you would get.
Right. Because in a normal vibrato, there's, there's pauses. There's space in between the notes.
Yeah. With this, it's note note note all pressed up against each other in a compressed way and that
zero function is what, what, it takes any spaces out between the notes and creates that robot sound.
Yeah. Cause I think autotune had, it has a range of numbers to make it flow more seamlessly and
when they took it all the way down to zero, which means there's nothing there. Yeah.
It created that weird effect that they're like, ah, share, you're listening to this. It's weird.
Yeah. And she was like, I like weird. It's great, baby. I hear number one hit in my future.
No, you got it wrong. It's, it's great, baby.
Did you ever see, no, that was a, that was Jack from Will and Grace. Oh, do you remember
when he thought he was talking to a share impersonator? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And he's like, no, if I could turn back time, he was like teaching her how to say it,
how to sing it correctly. I thoroughly enjoyed Will and Grace. Oh, it was a great show. Good
stuff. Holds up really well. Agreed. All right. Where are we? Well, you were talking about the
share effect, right? Yeah. And that's what it was called again. And Tari's called this zero
function the share effect for many years. And, and over time, remember her producer just kept
lying and lying and lying. Yeah. Over time, other producers independently figured out what he had
done that he had used this zero function, which was a really obscure tool on a software suite
that not everybody knew about, right? Right. So it took some, some brain power and some
experimentation, but little by little, some producers figured it out. This one producer
did a remix of a J Lo song and used it. And he, I think was the second person to use it
publicly. And it, for a brief time, it became known as the J Lo effect. Oh, of course. Anybody
who used this without fessing up to it at first in the early 2000s, it was called the whatever
effect. Yeah. And there's this producer rapper down in Florida named T Pain. Oh boy. And T Pain
heard this J Lo effect. He loved it. He went on a mission to figure out what this was. And he
finally, apparently took him years to figure it out. He finally figured out that it was this zero
effect on this Pro Tools plugin. And he started using it and just went crazy with it. Like,
up to this point, it was used to like tweak or it would maybe make a track of just a little weird
over here or something like that. Yeah. He used it as often as he possibly could. Yeah. He basically
said the zero function and T Pain are one and the same. Yeah. And it became known as the T Pain
effect. Really? Yeah. Because when people asked him how he did it, guess what he said? Vocoder.
Did he really? Yes. No. Yes, he did. And for years, he managed to make a mint because the whole
thing was in hip hop or in pop. If you wanted this T Pain effect, T Pain needed to console,
at least if not produce your record. That was like 10 years after the share effect.
How did people not know that? He managed to pull it off for years and years and years.
Good for T Pain is what I say. Yes. Yeah. I mean, he apparently was like, I guess on a plane ride,
Usher was on the same plane and asked to speak to him. And Usher was like, I've got to get something
off my chest. You really screwed up music like big time. T Pain was like, I made a bunch of money
doing this and people seem to like it. So I'm not going to stop. Hildebrand has been vilified by
many and he said, you know what? I just make the car. I don't drive it down the wrong side of the
road. Yeah. It's a great quote. This. Because a lot of people hate autotune and think it's the
worst thing that happened to music. A lot of people like it and say when you use it for what
it's supposed to be used for, it can really help out because, you know, it's not like everyone
uses it all the time. I'm sure some people need it way more than others. Well, even if you're
using it as a light cosmetic touch like Hildebrand originally designed it for, a lot of people say,
no, we shouldn't even be doing that because if you go back and listen to things like Bob Dylan
or the Beach Boys or just a lot of these original artists that didn't use these kind of effects on
their voice, when they sang and their recordings made it through the studio, there were still
flat notes here or there. Oh yeah. But it was their music. It was their voice. It was their vocals
in these tracks and everyone came to know and love them. But now, because everything is autotune
perfectly, even the stuff that you don't, you can't hear it's autotune because they're not using a
zero function. But just the fact that it's been run through the autotune, this stuff sounds really
rough by comparison. So a lot of people are like, autotune has ruined music. It ruined music that
people love for decades because now by comparison, it seems rough. Well, but it also like a good
ear can tell if something's autotune. It has this weird tinny quality that it doesn't sound natural.
So I think there will be blowback and a reversion back to older methods. Okay. I bet you Jack White
has an autotune. That's the most purest of pure guys. No, he uses all sorts of weird vocal effects
on his stuff. No, but as far as like, I bet he has. Ask him. He wouldn't have been it. Apparently,
that's par for the course. Yeah. So T-Pain, if we can get back to the history of this. Buy you a
drink. So T-Pain, right? He's huge. Like he's just everything he drops is just blowing up all over
the place. He's getting invited to consult and produce on Kanye's album. Yeah. Which ultimately
had a lot of autotune. Every track had autotune on it by the time T-Pain got done with it, right?
Yeah. Have you heard his Queen Bohemian Rhapsody live? No. Oh, dude. Is it good? Oh, no. Oh, no.
There's a video that someone spliced of him and he and Freddie Mercury. It's one of the worst things
I've ever heard on a stage. Oh, I've got to check it out. It's terrible. Okay. All right.
I got to see that. Yeah, it's good. So the T-Pain effect again. Yeah. And if you wanted this effect,
you had to have T-Pain. Well, Snoop Dogg says that's enough of that. Oh, finally. And he releases
something called Sensual Seduction. And it's one of the better rap videos you've ever seen.
It's pretty good. Yeah. There's a star wipe in it. So you know I love it. So Snoop releases this
using the T-Pain effect to great degree, but he didn't consult with T-Pain. T-Pain had nothing
to do with this record. So Snoop kind of opened the floodgates saying, if you guys want to use
this, go use it. But what's interesting, if you watch that video, when Snoop is doing like the
T-Pain effect or the auto-tune stuff, he's actually got a tube going to his synthesizer to make it
look like he's using a vocoder. Oh, interesting. Isn't that weird? Yeah, that is weird. Like in his
video. Yeah. But anyway, he changed... Are you sure that wasn't a marijuana smoking device? It may
have been. It may have been. Another thing about it. But Snoop changed everything in that he took
T-Pain out of the equation and really opened the floodgates for anybody and everybody to use this
stuff. Simultaneously, Jay-Z was trying to close those floodgates and push all of it back in.
Yeah. I think Jay-Z clearly jumped the shark at a certain point. You know when major ad
brands are making ads using the latest and greatest, that it's years late, first of all.
And that means it has definitely jumped the shark. And in 2009, Wendy's had a frosty posse
commercial where a gang of office workers built it out auto-tuned rhymes while searching for
frosties. I don't remember that ad, do you? I know, but I went and watched it, of course.
How is it? Pretty great. It's what you think it is. Pretty great? It's awesome. Okay. No, it's
terrible. And Jay-Z apparently saw this and was enraged. And so he wrote a song called DOA,
Death of Auto-Tune. I know we're facing a recession, but the music y'all making,
gonna make it the Great Depression. Get back to rap. You t-pain in too much.
That's calling someone out. Yeah. Hard. Yeah. But other Auto-Tune,
Auto-Tune the News was a big YouTube hit. Oh yeah, man. The Bed and Truder song?
Yeah. Let's play a clip from that from 2010. It was a local news footage
from Huntsville, Alabama of Antoine Dodson delivering. Who is an awesome human being?
Yeah, about a neighborhood intruder and someone auto-tuned that. The Gregory Brothers did.
That's right. Let's hear that real quick. Have you listened to that recently? No.
It's pretty great. Yeah. Yeah. But again, that was in 2010. And I think that even kind of had a
pretty short shelf life. Right. Unless they're still doing it. I don't know. That was a,
what did you say, the Gregory Brothers, the Brooklyn Soul Band? Yeah, they started out doing
Auto-Tune the News. Yeah. And they would take the news and just auto-tune it and turn it and
like just produce it, overproduce it. And they did that with the Bed and Truder song. And that
actually became the number one video on YouTube of all of 2010. I look, the original video has
128 million views right now. Yeah. Yeah. It's pretty impressive stuff. At the same point,
like now Auto-Tune has become a parody of itself. Yes. It's being used in ads. Sure. Here's the
progression. Something starts out. Someone uses it artistically. Yeah. Someone comes along and
overuses it. Then everybody starts to overuse it. Then Wendy's makes a commercial using it.
Newsweek finally gets around to writing an article about it. Uh-huh. And then years after,
we record a podcast on it. And then the thing finally dies. Yeah. And then 15 or 20 years after
that, it becomes hip again. Yes. You know. That's the progression. So the point that we're at though
now, Chuck, it's not so cut and dry, man. It's not as cut and dry as Jay-Z would like to have you
think. No. Because he came out with this death of Auto-Tune track in like 2009. Auto-Tune is still
around. Yeah. Very much. And now it's getting to the point where if like the Verge, and I can't
remember the other article I read. They're both on this podcast page. If they're to be believed,
they're credible sources. And they certainly seem like it from these articles. Yeah. There's a,
there's this growing question of, um, is Auto-Tune here to stay? Yeah. People are starting to compare
it to the initial reaction that people had to the electric guitar. Sure. It was a lot different from
the original guitar and people took a lot of getting used to it. Or like when Bob Dylan went
electric. Yeah. A lot of people didn't like that. Newport. But then look at what happened now with
the electric guitar. A lot of people tried different stuff with it. And it became a standard.
Some people are wondering if Auto-Tune is going to fulfill the same destiny.
I think most people are hoping that it does not. Yeah. Well, I mean,
sweetening vocals is nothing new. Like reverb is a tried and true thing for years and embraced.
Does that sweeten vocals? I thought that was always used to like make it weird.
No. It's, it's sort of like, it gives it a echo. Like you're singing in a big empty church hall
or something, but it makes, it sweetens it. It doesn't like correct anything. But when I say
sweetens it, it just makes it sound a little better. I got you. Reverb's a great tool.
Right. The point is it's artificial. Yeah. It's not natural. Yeah. They, it's,
they tried to replicate like singing in a big empty echo-y hallway. Yeah.
With an effect and it worked. Right. And another argument in favor of Auto-Tune that I've seen is
simply taking a human voice and recording it automatically makes it artificial. Like if they're
not there in the room with you singing to you at that moment, anything else is artificial.
True. So what's the problem? So just to let people know, I put out two texts during the
episode to musician friends. Jack White? No. I texted Lucy Wayne Wright, our buddy.
Yep. AKA Jerry from our TV show. She has not answered. Okay. Which means she's used Auto-Tune.
Getting. And our buddy Joey Ciara from the Henry Clay people, formerly of Henry Clay
people now with fakers. And he said, I think there were a few harmonized ooze and oz on one
of our old records where we did some pitch correcting, but that's it. I think maybe. So.
Definitely. He's probably gonna be mad that I said that. Thank you for being forthright,
Joey. Yeah. Good guy. Sure. You got anything else about Auto-Tune? Yeah, just a really quick.
This is from a great website. 10 artists that are essentially computer programs.
They just have the most Auto-Tune people. They have T-Pain, Kesha, Chris Brown, Maroon 5,
Black Eyed Peas, Daft Punk, Paris Hilton, who I forgot actually had a song. The cast of Glee,
Katy Perry, and number one was Owl City, who I don't even know what that is. There's a huge
outcry apparently among Glee fans for Glee to stop using so much Auto-Tune. I think the deal is
that they were like, well, these are actors. Yeah. And there's another, there's a big scandal with
UK's Got Talent or something weird like that. Yeah. Where they were using a lot of Auto-Tune
for the auditions. Oh, come on. Well, anyway, that's not a very surprising list. So this has been
grumpy old men. I don't feel like we've been grumpy. We haven't like condemned it outright.
No. Nico Case. She's my lady. She condemns it outright. Yeah. Emily, I have an agreement about
Nico Case, but we could both marry her if she was ever available to us. She's right behind you.
Oh my God. So we have a very, well, I'm going to finish up your deal. Sorry. I'll just jump the
gun. Okay. Thank you. You don't have anything else about Auto-Tune. No, I was just teasing. We
have a special listener mail with guests. Well, hold on. Let me finish first. Okay. Okay. Well,
since Chuck doesn't have anything, it's the end. And if you want to know more about Auto-Tune,
you can type those words into the search bar at HowStuffWorks.com. And this article I have to
say, by the way, was the most definitive article about Auto-Tune on the internet. How about that?
It's a good one. So you can go look that up. And since I said definitive, it's time for listener
mail. And it's a special one like Chuck said. That's right. Today, we got a joint listener mail to
ourselves and to Holly and Tracy from Stuff You Missed in History Class. Yep. So we're going
to bring them in, right? Yeah. We're going to read the email and we're going to talk about its
implications right now. Let's start now. So without further ado, we actually have Holly and Tracy
of Stuff You Missed in History Class with us. Yay. Hi. And Tracy, we have actually not with
us. She's with us in spirit and voice from Boston. I know. It's pretty interesting when it comes in
through your headphones, but the other person somewhere else. It's kind of awesome. Yeah.
And this is how you guys do the show now, right? Yes. We also have like an online,
you know, we have a Google Hangout where we both are. So we can see each other as well. Well,
that's neat. We should have done that. And Tracy in here with her little video image. Or like a
hologram of her. That'd be pretty cool too. That's true. All right. So I think the first thing I
should do is... You could have a picture of me like our old boss. Oh, well, I do have a picture of
you. I have the wallet size that you gave out. So I'll just look at that. I think the first thing
we should do is just read... I'll read the email here. And then we will discuss like adults. How
about that? What? So like I said, I already set it up that we both got an email from a listener.
And she says the following. And this is from Amanda Lyons. Hey, guys. And Gals. She didn't say that,
of course. I just did. Well, you should read it verbatim. Okay. Josh, Chuckers, Holly and Tracy.
And of course, a hello to Jerry and Noel. Yeah. I'm a social worker from Portland, Oregon with a
passion for human equity and respect. One of the original members of the SYSK Army and a more
recent listener to Mist in History. Yeah. I binged for about five months before I got all caught
up. So how about that? I'm concerned about something. I've heard a few times on the History
Podcast. And I was wondering if you guys would be willing to get together. We are. And look into
something to fulfill my curiosity. When Josh and Chuck receive corrections, they thank people for
being nice and frequently ask people not to be jerks when correcting them. When Holly and Tracy
talk about corrections, they receive, they ask people to be nice and have referred to corrections
on several occasions as hate mail. My concern is that listeners may be more disrespectful
to Holly and Tracy because they are women. And even if listeners are rude to Josh and Chuck,
they may rein it in when making corrections because they are men. Could be completely off base,
but if I'm right, I feel like the discrepancy should be addressed on the podcast to raise
awareness about how people treat men and women differently and even to address people's tendency
to feel protected by the anonymity of the internet and say things online they wouldn't say to someone's
face. And so, Manda, we did talk about it via email and now we're going to talk about it like
regular human folks. And Tracy really has the wealth of information because of her job and what
she's been responsible for in the past. Oh, yeah. That sounds serious. Yeah. I was part of the
management team of the website for several years before I started actually being on a podcast.
And for a chunk of that time, most of the podcasters reported to me. So even though I wasn't
managing the podcast program, I was sort of keeping tabs on the iTunes reviews for everybody.
And there was a definite, definite trend in that the podcast that had women on them got
disproportionately more vicious comments about what their voices sounded like versus
the podcast with men on them, which got less of that. So this is news to me. Misogyny on the
internet. I wasn't aware that that was a thing. He's had the most beautiful blind spot of all time.
No, I can imagine. And I know, Tracy, you've like pointed some of these out before. For us,
it's like, yeah, we'll get hate mail every once in a while. But it's kind of easy to dismiss
because even if it is directed at us, it's not necessarily directed at our gender or whatever.
It's not personal. Or even if it is personal, it's dumb. It's just dumb stuff. It's easy to
not take personally even when it's meant to be personal. But that's me speaking is like a white
male age 18 to 49. So I can imagine that when someone attacks you just based on your gender,
or even worse, if they're coming after you and they don't even realize that they're being driven by
this disdain for your gender, that has to make it a lot harder to just dismiss.
Yeah. Well, yeah, Holly, you can go.
I was gonna say for me, I mean, I am lucky in that I really give very few dams about what
most people think. Like unless you're sitting in my lap or paying my paycheck, like,
it's great if you like me, but if you don't, that's cool too. Like everybody do your thing.
But eventually, like the landslide builds up and it's not, it's not so much that I'm like
heartbroken or traumatized, but it just wears you down after a while where you're like,
why am I doing this? Absolutely. Just to get more of this crap.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, and we definitely have what we have been called slurs based on our gender
before. Oh, for sure. We have been called the C word over the podcast. Are you serious?
Yes. Unbelievable. Yeah. Well, and then I told you about that when we were discussing the email
in our email conversation, I told you about the person who wrote to us and said they didn't
understand how I could be in the same room with Holly without strangling her. Like that's the
kind of stuff that people will write to us and be really awful. But we do get a whole lot of them
that I don't think people are consciously being misogynistic, but they're talking to us and about
us in a very gendered way. So people tell us that we sound shrill or that we sound bossy,
and those aren't words that people would use to describe men most of the time. Well, no,
because men are assertive. They're not bossy. Right. Correct. And all of the articles that
had come out lately about especially vocal fry and other things that people criticize about
women's voices that they don't generally criticize about men's voices. Every single time I read it
and I'm like, I could have written that about my job and my experience being a woman talking on the
internet. So which one, which one hits home the most? Like one that's just a direct personal
attack or the ones that or the person's just being unconsciously misogynistic, which to me would seem
more entrenched. Yeah, to me, the second one is worse. And it's especially worse because a lot
of the implicitly gendered criticism that we get is also from women. Oh, yeah. That was the hardest
part. Yeah. That's the hardest part for me to deal with. Yeah. When they're real specific, for example,
like the person who wants me to be strangled. At the end of the day, I'm like, he's working
through his own stuff. Like I have really have very little to do with this. I may have been the
trigger that, you know, caused this little outrage bomb. But really, it has very little to do with
me. I think almost 100% of the time that is the case. These are people who have their own gripes
in life and are probably angry, unhappy people. Yes. But then as Tracy said, when you get those
ones that are like, they're not even conscious of how it's playing out. Yeah. You realize
how much it is a bigger sort of systemic social problem. Yeah. Because most of those people are
not evil. They don't intend to be misogynistic. They're not conscious that they're separating
the two genders and judging them differently on different criteria. So yeah, those are, as Tracy
said, a little more disturbing because you realize that it's kind of like the silent creep that
underlays everything. Yep. Absolutely. Well, we do get a lot of emails that are great from people
who are great. And the majority of the email that we get is great. So we like, I don't want to make
it sound like every person who writes to us is awful. And we talk about corrections on the
episode a lot of times from people who write it and everything is fine and everything's very
respectful. So to me, a correction is you said this person died in 19 to 18, but really it was
1927. That's a correction and that's fine. But then we'll also get ones that are like, I can't
believe you didn't even bother to look this up. You completely butchered it. I don't know why you
don't even put more thought into what you're doing because it's really important that you represent
yourselves well. And that's why I'm like, that's hate mail. Well, we get a lot of those, but I
never feel like those are like, have anything to do with my gender in those cases. Absolutely.
I mean, we get those same exact emails where it's just like, you guys are total idiots. Like,
how could you drop the ball this badly? And it's like, we basically said exactly what you're saying.
We just said it slightly differently. It definitely doesn't warrant this kind of reaction, you know?
Yeah. Why do you think there is a gender bias or a gender...
Why is it worse for you guys being women, do you think? Not just in comments.
Aside from the history of the world.
I know, like, how long do you have for this sacred?
But I mean, like, even beyond comments, like, why is the internet so geared toward
hating women? I mean, what's the deal with that? Do you guys, is there a general understanding
or idea behind it? The lonely, angry man is my guess.
Well, I think it's super complex, right? There's no one simple answer. Like, some of it is that we
have reached an age where the disparity in terms of gender equality has shrunk at the same time that
a lot of people have this outlet readily available to them. So there's progress being made, but there
are also the people who are still kicking and screaming as they get dragged into a future
they're not comfortable with. But then there's also just a thing that, again,
I don't think people are even conscious of it, where it is new for many people and even people
that are younger and have maybe grown up in a more kind of old school, traditional environment,
be it household or community, where they're not even conscious of why they're more upset at women.
There's just something about women, you know, sharing knowledge or being assertive or being
confident that just rankles them. And they don't even register that it's because it's a woman.
They just know there's something about that person I hate. And it's something they're just not used to
and they haven't kind of made the mental customization to, oh, sometimes people that
aren't dudes have stuff to say as well. Right. Do you think that same experience is extrapolatable
under race as well as gender? Oh, yeah, sure. Well, I mean, I know it is, but I mean, is it
almost like a step for step, do you think? I think it's probably pretty similar models.
Yeah. Yeah, well, speaking like as a white person in a room of white people who are on the phone
right now, the worst days I have ever had managing our Facebook page are days when we talk about
something that has to do with systemic racism. And we'll get a flood of similarly implicitly
racist comments from people who really don't know that the view that they just put out there
is racist. Like that's sort of the same thing. Like a lot of people do things that are misogynist,
not really consciously being misogynist that just it comes out and they're not consciously aware of
it. And it's, we see the same thing on our Facebook posts in subjects that are related to race
really pretty often. So at the end of the day, when you guys get a bunch of these,
say on just a particularly bad day, what do you do? I mean, do you battle this? Do you just
brush it off and be like, these guys are idiots and whether they like it or not,
they are going to be dragged into the future against their will. Do you do a combination of both?
Or do you look at your status as a perennial top 20 podcast and say they clearly,
who cares what they say because we're really good at what we do
because we're very successful? I do a combination of things. I have kind of a library of links
about vocal fry and whatever anyone writes directly to us to complain about vocal fry,
I kind of send them, hey, why don't you listen to this, this American life segment
all about vocal fry in which Ira Glass has vocal fry the entire segment, but nobody complains
at him about it. I specifically will address that. I will specifically address things that
people say on our Facebook page in public because I feel like our role as a podcast about history
does not include allowing people free reign to be racist in public and have that not be challenged.
But when it comes to the email that Holly and I got that was so bad pretty recently,
that was the person who was basically advocating me murdering Holly,
I was actually traveling. I went down to the hotel bar and had a drink.
There you go. I read a book and tried to chill. Yeah, I tried to chill out about it.
There's the answer. Booze.
Cocktail fixes everything. Well, thank you both for addressing this.
Yeah, I'm sorry we didn't solve this problem here in this listener mail segment.
Thank you for having us on the show. Of course. If anyone out there in stuff you should know
land has not checked out stuff you miss in history class, you definitely should because it is super
awesome. And as are both of you and I don't want to strangle you, but I want to hug your necks.
In a Lenny sort of way.
Nope. But you cut a rabbit. And now she don't move no more.
Nope, but thanks for coming in and we should do this more often, you know.
We should. We should have a whole show where we just get together and do round table stuff.
We can have yappy pow wow, party time. That would be fun.
Well, if you have something to say about all this, we're sure you will. We want to hear from you.
You can tweet to us at SYSK Podcast. You can tweet to stuff you missed in history class at.
At missed in history. You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know.
You can join stuff you missed in history class at.
At missed in history. Facebook.com slash missed in history. We make it easy.
And what about email? How do they get in touch with you?
History podcast at howstuffworks.com. And you can hit us up at stuffpodcast
at howstuffworks.com. And as always, join us at our home on the web, stuffyoushouldknow.com and
missedinhistory.com. Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
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