PureMix – How To Comp Vocals (TUTORIAL)

By | November 14, 2025

 

Release Year: 2016
Producer: pureMix
Website: www.puremix.net/video/how-to-comp-vocals.html
Author: Fab Dupont
Duration: 00:34:04
Type of Material Shared: Video Lesson
Language: English

  • 1.32 GB

Description: A flawless, one-take vocal performance is becoming increasingly rare these days. But that’s not a problem, because every modern DAW allows producers and engineers to meticulously edit any number of takes and compose them into a single, perfect track. Vocal comping is the art of selecting and then combining multiple takes of any vocal or instrumental part into a single, final take. In this lesson, Grammy winner Fab Dupont will show you how it’s done. A flawless, one-take vocal performance has become increasingly rare these days.
But that’s not a problem, this is why every modern DAW allows all of us producers and engineers to meticulously edit together any number of takes into one perfect performance.
Vocal comping is the art of both selecting and then combining multiple takes of any vocal or instrument into a single, ultimate take.
In this tutorial, Grammy winner Fab Dupont walks you through the entire comping process and shows you how to:
Balance technical perfection with artistic expression, maintaining the “feel” of a track while also maximizing the precision of the performance
Sort through dozens of takes without losing track the best ones
Know when to pick a winner and move on with life instead of endlessly deliberating between nearly identical options
Nudge and drag out edit points to create seamless and imperceivable comps
Quickly assemble comps using the tools at hand, in this case Avid’s Pro Tools playlist view and promote button/shortcuts
Whether you’re a Pro Tools, Logic, Cubase or Studio One user, learning how to effectively comp vocals together is an essential skill every engineer and producer needs to master.
Download the exercise files to practice comping the same vocal tracks Fab used in the tutorial. Inside the .zip file, you’ll find the Pro Tools session file, as well as the consolidated wav files for practicing composing with any DAW.

 

Example files: present
Video format: MP4
Video: AVC, 1920×1080, 16:9, 23.976 fps, 1321 kbps
Audio: AAC, 44.1 kHz, ~322 kbps, 2 channels


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