Failing that, there is the ultimate:

DNS or another Cedar product. However, serious results go with serious
prices alas. Still, you can't do much better...

http://www.independentaudio.com/CDCatalog/HTML/cedar.html


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 25 May 2007 18:17
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) OT: Audio cleanup

I'd be interested to hear about a multi-band / band specific noise 
reduction as well.

m50


At 10:47 2007/5/25, Thor Teague wrote:
>List,
>
>Apologies for the OT, but I'm getting pretty frustrated and would like
>some help; I've never had much success on this subject and I'd really
>like to figure it out. I need to know a good tool to remove (as best
>as possible) background noise from some crappy field audio. I've used
>about 6 or so that I'm not impressed with: SoundSoap, Waves X-Noise,
>Sony Noise Reduction, and Final Cut Pro's Soundtrack features.
>
>They all basically have a "threshold" and an "amount" slider (with
>varying ways to name them). I can basically lighten up the sound
>slightly, but I can't really take it out without the voice getting all
>robotic.
>
>I think I need something that allows you to choose different
>thresholds and amounts for different frequencies. I think. Let me know
>offlist what you've had success with, or any guideance/advice you
>might have.
>
>Thanks!

Reply via email to