Differences between version 37 and revision by previous author of SoundProcessingNotes.
Other diffs: Previous Major Revision, Previous Revision, or view the Annotated Edit History
Newer page: | version 37 | Last edited on Friday, December 24, 2004 8:13:47 am | by GreigMcGill | Revert |
Older page: | version 36 | Last edited on Thursday, December 23, 2004 11:36:11 pm | by DanielLawson | Revert |
@@ -28,9 +28,9 @@
After going through each stage, it makes a lot of sense to back up your current work. It is really annoying to have to sit through another 15 minutes of declicking because you screwed up a decrackle phase and didn't keep your undo information / backups.
! Removing clicks and pops
-GWC has three tools for removing clicks and pops - the strong, weak and manual declick tools. I've seen[1] recommendations to use the strong declick tool several times in a row, and found this to have fairly good results. Depending on how bad your vinyls were, you may have to run this 3 or 4 times.
+GWC has three tools for removing clicks and pops - the strong, weak and manual declick tools. I've seen~
[1] recommendations to use the strong declick tool several times in a row, and found this to have fairly good results. Depending on how bad your vinyls were, you may have to run this 3 or 4 times.
GWC outputs some statistics from its run:
<verbatim>
@@ -45,9 +45,9 @@
</verbatim>
! Removing crackle
-Records have a lot of crackle. Can't get away from it. GWC has a handy tool to remove it. [1] says you should do this, JeffWelty, a wiki visitor who commented on my previous pages, suggested skipping it.
+Records have a lot of crackle. Can't get away from it. GWC has a handy tool to remove it. ~
[1] says you should do this, JeffWelty, a wiki visitor who commented on my previous pages, suggested skipping it.
! Removing other noise.
GWC also has a denoise tool. This is reasonably configurable, with a selection of different algorithms and tunable parameters. Unless you're in a big hurry, you should really play around a bit.
@@ -67,9 +67,9 @@
You can either split the file out and write to separate .wav files, or you can write out a cdrdao style TOC file for the .wav, which you can then use to burn to CD later on
!! Sites Referenced.
* http://www.linuxdj.com/audio/quality/
-* [1]http://www.xena.uklinux.net/Linux/audio.html
+* ~
[1]http://www.xena.uklinux.net/Linux/audio.html
* http://linux-sound.org/
* http://magicref.tripod.com/articles/darmp3.htm
* http://freshmeat.net/projects/phonoripper/
* http://panic.et.tudelft.nl/~costar/gramofile/