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How to Mix Vocals Like Gunna (Melodic Trap Playbook)

How to Mix Vocals Like Gunna (Melodic Trap Playbook)

Gunna’s vocal is smooth on top, relaxed in delivery, and glued to the 808 without harshness. This beginner-friendly playbook covers capture, routing, chain settings, FX moves, stack strategy, and export targets so your mix holds up on phones, earbuds, and club systems. For a fast launch point, try polished vocal presets as your base map and tweak thresholds and sends to match your mic and tone.

I. The Gunna fingerprint: relaxed, melodic and glued to the beat

The vibe is melodic trap with a calm front edge. The vocal sits a touch forward, consonants are clear but never spiky, and the top air is silky. Ad-libs punctuate lines with texture—filtered or lightly distorted—and delays move with the hi-hat grid. Low-mids stay lean so the 808 breathes, and the whole vocal rides the groove instead of fighting it.

  • Tuning: quick retune for rap-sung phrases; keep formants natural on long vowels.
  • Presence: 2–4 kHz is readable but not sharp; air sits around 10–12 kHz.
  • Control: serial compression for steadiness; no brickwall feel.
  • Space: slap or dotted-eighth delays; compact reverb shaped to stay out of the lyric.

II. Capture & prep: decisions that pay off later

Tracking level. Aim raw vocal peaks around −12 to −8 dBFS. Keep the room quiet. Use a pop filter. Do not compress hard on input; capture should be clean.

Comping and clip gain. Build one tight comp. Smooth hot syllables with clip gain before compression. Keep natural breaths—this style benefits from a relaxed, human pace.

Session hygiene. Color-code tracks and label regions. Align edits with tiny fades (2–10 ms). Consistent prep makes the chain predictable.

III. Routing blueprint for melodic trap

Organization makes the sound. Use simple lanes that mix fast:

  • LEAD — the main vocal line.
  • HYPE — doubles/occasional stacks that add body in hooks.
  • ADLIB FX — character phrases: band-pass, formant shift, grit.
  • VOCAL MASTER — all vocal buses feed this for gentle glue and polish.
  • MUSIC — the entire instrumental or grouped stems.
  • 808 — a separate bus for sub decisions; protects punch when carving space.

Sends to set up now: mono slap, tempo delay (1/8 or dotted-eighth), short plate/small room, and a throws bus for words that need spotlight echoes.

IV. Core chain: smooth control with tiny moves

Keep increments small. This tone collapses if you over-EQ or chase brightness too early.

  1. Pitch correction (up front). Set key/scale. Hooks: faster retune. Verses: moderate speed. Engage humanize/transition so sustained notes stay natural. Keep formant protection on.
  2. Subtractive EQ (cleanup). HPF 80–100 Hz (voice-dependent). If the booth adds “box,” dip 200–350 Hz wide by 1–2 dB. For nasality, try a soft notch near 1 kHz. Save boosts for later.
  3. Compressor 1 (shape). Ratio 2:1–3:1. Attack 10–30 ms. Release 80–200 ms or auto. Aim 3–5 dB of gain reduction on phrases; let consonants breathe so diction stays relaxed yet clear.
  4. De-esser (broad). Center ~6–8 kHz with a wide band. Reduce only what you hear on earbuds; avoid “lispy” side-effects.
  5. Saturation for density. Tape/triode or clean transformer. Mix 5–10%. Keep output matched so you’re not fooled by loudness.
  6. Compressor 2 (safety). Faster; 1–2 dB GR to catch peaks. This stabilizes sends and keeps the lead steady against the instrumental.
  7. Polish EQ (tiny lifts). If the mic is dark: +0.5–1 dB at 3–4 kHz for presence. A gentle air shelf +0.5–1 dB at 10–12 kHz if needed. If S’s rise, return to the de-esser rather than adding more top.
  8. Sends (space). Mono slap 80–120 ms for attitude. Tempo delay at 1/8 or dotted-eighth with low feedback; sidechain-duck repeats from the LEAD so they breathe between syllables. Short plate or tight room with 20–60 ms pre-delay; always high-pass and low-pass the return.

V. FX playbook: movement, grit, and character

Phone band-pass. 300 Hz–3 kHz with a touch of drive turns transitional words into stylish ear candy. Automate for single words on bar turns.

Formant play. ±2–3 semitones on ADLIB FX adds alien edges without breaking the lead. Keep mix low; it should color, not distract.

Triplet/dotted-eighth delay. Rage-leaning beats love these grids. Keep feedback modest and filter to ~6–7 kHz to avoid hiss. Sidechain ducking makes repeats feel “after-you,” not on top of you.

Parallel grit. For a hint of aggression on hooks, send a little of the LEAD to a distortion aux, low-pass around 5–6 kHz, and tuck it way under. You’ll feel energy without losing silk.

VI. Hook architecture: doubles, octaves, and tasteful layers

HYPE doubles. Two tight doubles in the hook. High-pass slightly higher than the lead. More de-ess. Tuck each 6–9 dB under the LEAD. If you need width, micro-pan L/R a little; avoid chorus swirl.

Octave layer. An octave-down under select words adds weight. Filter lows harder, de-ess firmly, and keep it felt more than heard. Octave-up is optional; use sparingly if the production is already bright.

Automation choreography. Ride the LEAD ±1 dB into downbeats. Lower FX 1 dB during fast consonants. Lift the slap a touch on the last line into the chorus, then return it to normal.

VII. Make space with 808s, hats, and synth walls

Dynamic EQ on MUSIC bus. Sidechain a small dip at 2–4 kHz from the LEAD. This opens a lane for consonants without extra brightness.

808 coexistence. If syllables vanish under the sub, use a dynamic shelf around 120–180 Hz keyed from the LEAD on the 808 or MUSIC bus. Keep moves subtle; the ear should notice clarity, not ducking.

Mid/side hygiene. Anchor low-mids in mid (M). Let pads/synths widen in side (S). If cymbals splash, try a tiny S-only dip around 9–10 kHz to calm them without dulling the center.

Two-track beat reality. If you’re working over a stereo instrumental and plan to deliver stems later, this walkthrough on export stems from FL Studio helps you prep files that line up sample-accurately.

VIII. Two complete chains (stock and third-party)

Stock-only chain (any major DAW):

  1. Pitch correction: fast for hooks; moderate for verses; humanize/transition on; formants preserved.
  2. EQ: HPF 90 Hz; wide −2 dB at 250 Hz if muddy; tiny notch near 1 kHz if nasal.
  3. Comp 1: 2:1; attack 20 ms; release 120 ms; 3–5 dB GR.
  4. De-esser: 6–8 kHz, broad; reduce 2–4 dB on S’s.
  5. Saturation: warm/tape, 5–10% mix; match output.
  6. Comp 2: faster; 1–2 dB GR on peaks.
  7. EQ polish: +0.5–1 dB at 3.5 kHz if dull; tiny 10–12 kHz shelf if needed.
  8. Sends: mono slap 90–110 ms; dotted-eighth delay; short plate; filter returns.

Third-party flavor (example):

  1. Auto-Tune / Melodyne: quick for hooks; musical for verses; formants on.
  2. FabFilter Pro-Q 3: HPF 90 Hz; dynamic notch 250 Hz when booth blooms.
  3. Opto comp (LA-2A-style): gentle body shaping.
  4. Resonance control (Sooth-style): light in 4–8 kHz only as needed.
  5. Analog/tube sat: low mix for density; watch noise; match output.
  6. 1176-style comp: fast, 1–2 dB GR on peaks.
  7. Air EQ (Maag-style): micro +0.5–1 dB at 10–12 kHz if mic is dark.
  8. FX: EchoBoy slap + dotted-eighth; short plate; occasional band-pass + drive on ADLIB FX.

IX. Troubleshooting: quick fixes that stick

  • Air is pretty but S’s stab: widen the de-esser band; reduce the air shelf by 0.5 dB; low-pass delay returns to ~6–7 kHz.
  • Lead feels thin in hooks: ease the HPF a few Hz; add +1 dB at 160–220 Hz (wide); blend 10–20% parallel warmth.
  • Words get swallowed by 808: dynamic shelf at 120–180 Hz keyed from the LEAD on 808/MUSIC; small 2–4 kHz duck on MUSIC when the vocal speaks.
  • Over-tuned artifacts: slow retune slightly; raise humanize/transition; ensure formants are preserved.
  • Delays read messy: lower feedback; increase sidechain ducking; automate throws only on section entries.

X. Export, loudness, and finishing

During mixing: keep raw vocal peaks around −12 to −8 dBFS. After processing, leave headroom; avoid a hard limiter on the mix bus so transients live. The mix should peak near −3 dBFS with true peak ≤ −1.0 dBTP.

Final bounce: stereo WAV, 24-bit at your session sample rate. Loudness belongs to mastering—competitive level with punch, safe peaks, and clean heads/tails. If you want a platform-ready finish with aligned alternates (instrumental, a cappella, clean/radio), book focused mastering services. Need a collaborative pass to dial balances, automate FX, and prep stems while you keep creating? Consider notes-driven mixing services.

XI. Wrap-up

“Gunna” means smooth, confident, and glued to the groove. Keep low-mids tidy, shape presence with restraint, use delays for motion, and reserve grit for ad-lib moments. Save a template for LEAD/HYPE/ADLIB FX/VOCAL MASTER and learn it deeply at one monitor level. If you want to move faster from ideas to finished songs, start with reliable recording templates then nudge thresholds and sends to your voice, and you’ll reach that relaxed, glossy lane that rides the 808 instead of fighting it.

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