"Stutter" is a song by American R&B singer Joe. The original version of the song was produced by Roy "Royalty" Hamilton and Teddy Riley and written by Roy "Royalty" Hamilton and Ernest E. Dixon.[1]
A remix by Allen "Allstar" Gordon Jr.[2] (marketed as the "Double Take Remix" due to its appearance in the 2001 film Double Take) features rapper Mystikal and was a number-one hit on the US Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in 2001. It was one of three singles to have sold over 500,000 copies in the US in 2001.[3]
The song and video refers to Joe's girlfriend, who comes home early in the morning while he wakes up and they discuss where she had been. She's "stuttering" because it seems she is lying to him about having an affair. Joe's close friend, portrayed by rapper Mystikal, follows and spies on her while she sleeps with another man in a motel, called the "Easy Rest-In", taping it on video. After she leaves, she and Mystikal are driving next to each other on the road, while they discuss the bad situation. Arriving home, Joe's girlfriend notes the video in their television, turning out it was her evil twin sister having that affair. Both the girlfriend and the twin sister were played by actress Natashia Williams.[4]
Izotope Stutter Edit is perfect for this. Or, you could put certain vocal lines into EXS-24 and play in the stutters the old-skool way (funny how all of this comes back around again). You can even filter vocals in the sampler once you have the sampler instrument set up.
Bouncing around... try the stereo delay. Right out of the box it will ping-pong audio left and right. Takes some tweaking to make the delays not drift off to one side, but that's one way. Another way -- if you don't want to use delay -- is to write in panning moves to track automation.
But dollars aside, stuttering manually puts you in more control over what you want to hear. Then again, once you set up EXS and start experimenting you're bound to play something cool that wasn't totally intentional.
LOL! I don't think vocal stuttering is covered in the manual. But you will do yourself a HUGE favor by starting to read some of what the manual has to say. If I were you I'd print out maybe just the section on EXS from the Studio & Effects manual so that you can concentrate solely on that for a minute (and I'm saying print it out cuz personally I find it extremely annoying to read manuals on the computer).
Okay so I'm kind of getting it going....now what i'm curious about...i chopped up the entire vocal track earlier into the pieces i'd need using the scissors tool...and i programmed the first little snippet into midi so that i could use the sample editor to make the stutter...now my question: how do i program the different cuts of audio to the different keys in EXS24's editor?
It's pretty incredible, although hard to get your head around. I set a few parameters then bounce whole vocal and then chop up the bits I wanna keep. It's great for instant stutter/glitch but as I said pretty hard to Suss.
Having been sent stems to BT's track 'The War', entrants had to create a remix using Stutter Edit 2. The pair's electrifying synth remix of 'The War' was a standout for US producer BT who was judging the contest. Wayfloe's work saw them crowned champions, which gets them iZotope's Music Production Suite 3, a copy of Stutter Edit 2, a one-year subscription of Splice Sounds, a video call with BT and a mix released on BT's Black Hole Recordings.
Wayfloe's career shot into action at leSoniq Music Festival in Montreal in 2015. Among their back catalogue are hypnotic, synth-heavy tunes, 'Fractions' with Jessie Frye being one of them. Then there's the glowing 'Let Me Show You Love' and synth-winding 'Feel Again' with Rhea Raj.
They released their debut album 'Neon West' in 2019 and have their follow-up LP, 'Celestials', arriving at the start of 2021. You can expect the first track from that this autumn, so keep your eyes peeled.
N2 - Objective: To determine the feasibility and acceptability of a computerised treatment for social anxiety disorder for adults who stutter including identification of recruitment, retention and completion rates, large cost drivers and selection of most appropriate outcome measure(s) to inform the design of a future definitive trial. Design: Two-group parallel design (treatment vs placebo), double-blinded feasibility study. Participants: 31 adults who stutter. Intervention: Attention training via an online probe detection task in which the stimuli were images of faces displaying neutral and disgusted expressions. Main outcome measures Psychological measures: Structured Clinical Interview Global Assessment of Functioning score; Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale; Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory; State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs about Stuttering. Speech fluency: percent syllables stuttered. Economic evaluation: resource use questionnaire; EuroQol three-dimension questionnaire. Acceptability: Likert Scale questionnaire of experience of trial, acceptability of the intervention and randomisation procedure. Results: Feasibility of recruitment strategy was demonstrated. Participant feedback indicated that the intervention and definitive trial, including randomisation, would be acceptable to adults who stutter. Of the 31 participants who were randomised, 25 provided data at all three data collection points. Conclusions: The feasibility study informed components of the intervention. Modifications to the design are needed before a definitive trial can be undertaken. Trial registration number I SRCTN55065978.
AB - Objective: To determine the feasibility and acceptability of a computerised treatment for social anxiety disorder for adults who stutter including identification of recruitment, retention and completion rates, large cost drivers and selection of most appropriate outcome measure(s) to inform the design of a future definitive trial. Design: Two-group parallel design (treatment vs placebo), double-blinded feasibility study. Participants: 31 adults who stutter. Intervention: Attention training via an online probe detection task in which the stimuli were images of faces displaying neutral and disgusted expressions. Main outcome measures Psychological measures: Structured Clinical Interview Global Assessment of Functioning score; Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale; Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory; State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs about Stuttering. Speech fluency: percent syllables stuttered. Economic evaluation: resource use questionnaire; EuroQol three-dimension questionnaire. Acceptability: Likert Scale questionnaire of experience of trial, acceptability of the intervention and randomisation procedure. Results: Feasibility of recruitment strategy was demonstrated. Participant feedback indicated that the intervention and definitive trial, including randomisation, would be acceptable to adults who stutter. Of the 31 participants who were randomised, 25 provided data at all three data collection points. Conclusions: The feasibility study informed components of the intervention. Modifications to the design are needed before a definitive trial can be undertaken. Trial registration number I SRCTN55065978.
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