Audition Sound Remover
Posted: 11 Oct 2013 16:00
Hi,
Some while back I mentioned a new feature in Audition CC that I hadn't had time to look at and yeppie expressed an interest when I did. I apologise for the delay, but have now given it a quick try. I took the liberty of using 20 secs from Motel_Sex_543f (thanks for the great downloads yeppie). I used it because of the air conditioning noise that runs through it, or whatever it is. The clip is near enough 4.15 to 4.25 of the original. I didn't spend long working on it, so maybe better results can be achieved with a more sophisticated approach, but here's the before and after to see what folks think. Bye the way I did delete the lowest frequencies from about 280k, but this is just force of habit, so that's nothing to do with the Sound Remover.
The first clip is without any Sound Remover processing at all and there's a screen capture of the Spectral Frequency Display. The second has the Sound Remover processing applied from 8 secs onwards and there's also a capture of the Spectral Frequency Display from that clip. In case anyone is not familiar with SFD it displays lowest to highest frequencies from bottom to top and volume is indicated by brightness, so bright yellow is loudest.
I would be interested to see how well members of the community think it works. I find it very difficult to be objective when I've worked on something, even if it was only a quick attempt. Second clip to follow.
Some while back I mentioned a new feature in Audition CC that I hadn't had time to look at and yeppie expressed an interest when I did. I apologise for the delay, but have now given it a quick try. I took the liberty of using 20 secs from Motel_Sex_543f (thanks for the great downloads yeppie). I used it because of the air conditioning noise that runs through it, or whatever it is. The clip is near enough 4.15 to 4.25 of the original. I didn't spend long working on it, so maybe better results can be achieved with a more sophisticated approach, but here's the before and after to see what folks think. Bye the way I did delete the lowest frequencies from about 280k, but this is just force of habit, so that's nothing to do with the Sound Remover.
The first clip is without any Sound Remover processing at all and there's a screen capture of the Spectral Frequency Display. The second has the Sound Remover processing applied from 8 secs onwards and there's also a capture of the Spectral Frequency Display from that clip. In case anyone is not familiar with SFD it displays lowest to highest frequencies from bottom to top and volume is indicated by brightness, so bright yellow is loudest.
I would be interested to see how well members of the community think it works. I find it very difficult to be objective when I've worked on something, even if it was only a quick attempt. Second clip to follow.