![]() ![]() The same track, “Stupid Cupid” by Arthur Kody can be heard below, recorded and mixed entirely with the Spire app and a Spire Pro free trial. Feel free to download the project to your own Spire app. Here is the link to a Spire Project example. When you upload your entire Spire Project to the cloud, you can send a link to whoever you want and they will be able to add time-stamped comments, download the project in the format they want (MP3, WAV, individual stems), or even add to it their own Spire app on their iPhone. One of the best ways to share your work is via the cloud sharing option. When you’re ready to share your vocal recordings, you have plenty of export options in the Spire app. Sharing a Voice Memos file is easy enough, but limited in scope. Spire Pro even comes with a feature called “Inspire Me” that adds randomized, unique effects to your vocal with static EQ, plate reverb, iZotope Trash distortion, echo, chorus, phaser, flanger, and more so you can roll the dice to create your own unique style. Add vocal pitch correction with the Tune effect, adjust formants with Hi-Shift and Lo-Shift, give your vocal some extra flair with the new Chill or Lo-Fi effects, and add body with the new Acoustic Shaper. Spire Pro subscribers get access to some other mixing features that are great for vocals. The first was recorded using Voice Memos, the second with the Spire app. ![]() To memoize a component, wrap it in memo and use the value that it returns in place. With memo, you can create a component that React will not re-render when its parent re-renders so long as its new props are the same as the old props. Here are two examples of the same vocal phrase, recorded just seconds apart. React normally re-renders a component whenever its parent re-renders. That means whether you want to send a quick vocal idea to your producer, or you need your final vocal stems to use in a DAW, you can rest assured knowing your audio will remain the highest quality possible. The Spire app records audio at 48kHz (sample rate) and 24-bit (bit rate), which is considered excellent in terms of audio capture. The higher your sample rate and bit rate when recording, the more information you will retain in the printed audio file. Sample rate is the number of samples of audio carried per second, while the bit rate is the number of bits-or units of data-that are processed per second. The two main reasons why audio that is captured in Spire is higher quality are sample rate and the bit rate. The Spire app keeps all your recordings uncompressed so you can export the tracks in whatever format you’d like, including WAV files, MP3, or individual stems. Did you know your iPhone compresses your Voice Memos recordings by default into M4A audio files? Compressing audio files results in smaller file sizes, but you end up sacrificing a lot of audio quality. ![]()
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