<![CDATA[Gizmodo: kanye west]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: kanye west]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/kanyewest http://gizmodo.com/tag/kanyewest <![CDATA[See the Internet As Kanye West Sees the Internet]]> This Kanye West glasses bookmarklett is almost perfect. If it also changed every word on the page to "Kanye West," we'd have a winner. [F.A.T. via psfk]

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<![CDATA[The Secret of Auto-Tune: Kanye and T-Pain Are Not Good Singers]]> Auto-tuning, the practice of digitally "repairing" off-key vocal tracks, is more visibly prominent than ever. But it's even more ubiquitous than people realize, and some musicians and fans aren't happy about it.

Auto-tune really only entered public consciousness with the release of that one Cher song that's somehow still playing in malls more than a decade later. And lately, some rappers, most notably T-Pain and most distressingly Kanye West, have taken up the robotic vocal torch. Even stark minimalist Bon Iver used the software, made by Antares Audio Technologies, on his most recent EP. But Time's recent article explains that auto-tune is used on just about every major-label pop album these days, from Britney Spears to Faith Hill. It's now assumed that auto-tuning will be applied to almost any recording that doesn't specifically refuse it.

Some, including legendary producer Rick Rubin and possible love of my life Neko Case, aren't fans of the near-required use of auto-tuning. Rubin notes that many classic recordings were only achieved after repeated attempts, and that emotion and passion can be lost with the use of the software. Case, in typical brash honesty, declared, "That shit sounds like shit!" regarding auto-tuned singers, and compared it to the artificiality of diet soda.

We often forget that it's the imperfection of vocals that can make them the most powerful. There's nothing wrong with glossy bubblegum like T-Pain, but to use auto-tuning indiscriminately can absolutely kill honest emotion.

On the other hand, it's hard not to like T-Pain; his unabashed lack of singing ability doesn't make him a lesser pop artist, and his pledge to create an iPhone app that would allow anybody to auto-tune themselves into a crooning robot actually sounds like a great idea. Britney, you can fix your warble all you want, but leave the serious music alone, okay? [Time]

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<![CDATA[Nooka Glow-In-The-Dark Watches Are Just For Kanye West]]> Speaking of jackholes with gadgets, here's Nooka's special glow-in-the-dark Zub watches that they made for Kanye West and his "Glow in the Dark" tour. You know, Nooka, the company tha tmakes watches with dots and meters? Too bad you can't have any of these because Kanye took them all. Tough luck, sucka! Maybe when you're a multi-platinum recording artist, you too can have a gadget made just for you and then take them all. [Nookastyle via Core77]

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<![CDATA[Nooka Zirc Watch: Coming Soon (to Kanye's House)]]> Who doesn't love an artistically offbeat way of telling time—and telling your friends exactly how cool you are? Zirc is the first new watch from Nooka since 2005. Its elongated rectangular frame is meant to be worn up the arm a bit, held by a metal mesh or colored band. Nooka replaced the old rectangular hour-counting dot array with a circular one, perhaps because it's better for a quick check of the time. (Is Nooka saying that radical designs might stray too far from practicality?) Kanye apparently loves the Nooka line, so our guess is that when the $350 watch comes available in December, Mr. West gets a review sample before we do. [Nooka press release]

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