
""Ariana's track was on top and Cynthia's was just below it. I noticed that the shape of the vibrato on both... looked identical on both tracks. "That stuff was so tight, it almost looked like someone had edited it to be synced up almost perfectly. But it is literally just how they sang it live in the room.""
""I don't think I've seen anything like this" "Look how the timing, the dynamics, even the vibrato is almost identically in sync. No one could try to do this. I don't think I've seen/heard anything like this," he said. "They both were so happy and couldn't believe that was happening. Ari suggested I color-code the waveforms to represent each character. "If they tried to do that, I'm not sure they could do it - I don't think anybody could - but it just kept happening all the time.""
A waveform image from a January Variety interview showed Ariana Grande's track above Cynthia Erivo's, with vibrato shapes appearing identical. The in-sync vocal waveform resurfaced and went viral after the release of Wicked: For Good. Music producer Greg Wells said the alignment was so tight it looked edited, yet it was performed live in the room. Wells sent the screenshot to Grande and Erivo, who were amazed, and Grande suggested color-coding the waveforms to represent characters. Wells praised the chemistry between the two and said the near-perfect synchronicity kept recurring during the performance. The aligned vocals occur on the final duet "For Good," a sapphic-coded number featuring Elphaba (Erivo).
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