Hello,

Thanks. I can do a segment of just the background fan audio. It's a
standard box fan on the high setting if that helps.

I can do a segment, how long, and when I have just that segment what next?

Thanks.
Dave.


On 2/16/21, JM Casey <jmca...@teksavvy.com> wrote:
> Hey David.
>
> Sorry, EQ is just short for "equalisation", which I should have used. It
> just means applying an equalizer to the tracks to bring out the desired
> frequencies. You may not need it, depending on how yours sounds after you
> record.
> What kind of background noise is it? It's easy to remove hums and steady
> machine-like sounds. You should  record a section of nothing but the noise,
> then apply a noise reduction thing to reduce that particular noise/set of
> frequencies. I record on my desktop and the fans are fairly noisy -- the
> noise reduction filter drops that out pretty nicely.
>
> For podcasting, consider another microphone -- a unidirectional one that
> will just pick up your voice/what's directly in front of it. That said I
> don't use one of those currently, but one of those snowball mics -- it does
> pick up sound from all around it, but it's quiet around here as it's just me
> in this place, so it works ok. Still, a more studio-oriented mic would be
> ideal.
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: all-audio@groups.io <all-audio@groups.io> On Behalf Of David Mehler
> Sent: February 15, 2021 07:24 PM
> To: all-audio@groups.io
> Subject: Re: [all-audio] podcasting, any tips?
>
> Hello,
>
> Thanks for your reply. What I did with my first go was to make the podcast
> then use goldwave's maximize volume option to get the volume to zero db
> without clipping.
>
> I have been reading, and listening to tutorials and presentations since my
> first podcast and have learned about vst plugins, that's where I wondered
> about a compressor. I've also got some background noise that my phone
> microphone picks up. It's from another room about ten feet maybe 15 feet
> away I'm actually surprised the mic got it, if possible i'd like to filter
> that out.
>
> Can you explain EQ?
>
> Thanks.
> Dave.
>
>
> On 2/15/21, JM Casey <jmca...@teksavvy.com> wrote:
>> Crazy volume differences are one of my pet peeves listening to
>> podcasts. I like to listen to them while doing stuff around the home,
>> with my desktop PC broadcasting to my bluetooth headphones. It works
>> great until someone inserts an audio clip from somewhere, or there's a
>> guest on, whose volume is so different from that of the main host --
>> either loud enough to burst my eardrums or so quiet I have to crank it
>> and then quickly turn down again when the clip is over.
>> Anyway, you say you're already using plugins and doing
>> post-processing. Is that not working out for you? What are you doing to
>> the audio exactly?
>> Noramlising audio volume?
>> For your speaking voice, a bit of compression might be nice, but I
>> think eq is maybe the most important thing to apply -- in my opinion
>> you want to bring out the higher frequencies of the human voice a bit,
>> to make things like sibilances clear and well-defined but not so sharp
>> that they're distorting (this shouldn't happen so much with a good
>> microphone, anyway).
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: all-audio@groups.io <all-audio@groups.io> On Behalf Of David
>> Mehler
>> Sent: February 15, 2021 06:43 PM
>> To: all-audio@groups.io
>> Subject: [all-audio] podcasting, any tips?
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm dipping in to podcasting. I've made and submitted one, but think I
>> could do better. The podcast is a demo which is recorded on my s10+
>> using amazing
>> mp3 recorder, and demoing features of the phone so it's also talking.
>>
>> One thing I've noticed is sometimes the audio isn't right, it's either
>> to loud or not loud enough, I've maximized volume. I am using
>> goldwave6 with some added-vst-plugins for post-processing. The files
>> are recorded as wav files then saved as 44.1Khz 64Kbps mp3 files.
>>
>> I thought about giving a compressor a go to make my voice crisper and
>> the phone volume more even as well, but don't want to smash things to
>> soundly.
>>
>> I'd appreciate any tips.
>>
>> Thanks.
>> Dave.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 
>
>
>


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