The only effect in audacity and lame that seems to work is reducing the audio.  
Why does it sound good in it's original mp3 format of 192 kbps and 44
khz but sounds bad at 24 kbps and 22 khz?  It's mainly a voice lecture.

On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 16:12:53 +0530
"tech list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Marty, unfortunately, there's not much you can do since the recording itself
was low quality. 22KHz should have been OK for voice, but looks like the mic
was placed badly
or the acoustics of your room/hall was not the best.
Your best bet would be to forget about lame for the moment and try out with
some audio
tools like audacity. Keep a copy of the original recording and play around
with some noise
cancellation, filtering etc. to see what sounds best.


On 1/24/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a lecture recording (no music, just voice) that was recorded with a
> digital recorder about 1 foot from the speaker at 22 kHz and 16 bit
> mono.  It sounds like the speaker is in a well.  Can I clean the recording
> up a bit with a filter in lame?
>
> Marty
>
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