Removing background music
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Ken Lang
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- Location: Simi Valley, Ca
Removing background music
I've got a recording of my brother-in-law and I from about 1958. I'd like to remove the background from the track and leave just the vocal, so I can put a new background in it. They say Audacity, which I have, can do it. There's even a couple of posts on U tube on how to do it, but they are not very clear.
Anyway, I tried it with no success, that is, I only got a few steps into it before the next steps became unclear. The help file doesn't seem to help either.
Anyone done this? In Audacity or any thing else?
Anyway, I tried it with no success, that is, I only got a few steps into it before the next steps became unclear. The help file doesn't seem to help either.
Anyone done this? In Audacity or any thing else?
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Tobie Schalkwyk
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- Location: South Africa
Ken I can't imagine that there's any software that can do this - unless it was recorded in midi / other multitracking format with the vocals & music on seperate 'channels' / tracks. You can then 'switch of' / delete some of the channels / tracks until only the vocals remain.
If you've got it in mp3 / cda (normal CD) format then all of the song is recorded in one stream and it's highly unlikely that any software can distinguish voice from music in order to split it.
What format is your recording in?
If you've got it in mp3 / cda (normal CD) format then all of the song is recorded in one stream and it's highly unlikely that any software can distinguish voice from music in order to split it.
What format is your recording in?
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Ken Lang
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- Joined: 8 Jul 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Simi Valley, Ca
The original recording was done on a Webcor tape recorder. I took that recording and ran it into Cakewalk. Then I made it into an MP3. When I put it onto a CD it was a Windows Media File. I can convert the song into most any file extension.
As I say, I tried it Audacity. I was able to divide it into a stereo track, and from there should be able to invert the music so it will be gone, leaving only the vocal. I've seen it done in the Utube video. I just can't seem to do it myself.
As I say, I tried it Audacity. I was able to divide it into a stereo track, and from there should be able to invert the music so it will be gone, leaving only the vocal. I've seen it done in the Utube video. I just can't seem to do it myself.
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John Roche
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Bent Romnes
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Ken Lang
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- Location: Simi Valley, Ca
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John Roche
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Joey Ace
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Removing or isolating vocals by the stereo inversion method is very dependent on how the stereo mix was originally created.
If you made a stereo mix from a mono original, it won't
work.
The best you can do is aggressively EQ the unwanted frequencies out. This usually yields unsatisfactory results, because some of those freqs overlap with what you want to keep.
If you made a stereo mix from a mono original, it won't
work.
The best you can do is aggressively EQ the unwanted frequencies out. This usually yields unsatisfactory results, because some of those freqs overlap with what you want to keep.
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Ken Lang
- Posts: 4708
- Joined: 8 Jul 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Simi Valley, Ca
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Ken Lang
- Posts: 4708
- Joined: 8 Jul 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Simi Valley, Ca