Recently I've been looking into hooking up the audio interface into my mobile to at least get rid of computer noise. Your video has probably saved me some hassle and minor expenses, great synchronicity ;-). Thank you.
The gate could do with a bit of release, but it's a very good video! Thank you for showing me ReFir! Now I don't have to deal with the Audacity noise removal
What a massive help! Audacity has this similar noise removal, but I didn't want to have to download and transfer my files to a whole other program just for that so thanks!!
I tried using ReaFir to clean up drum bleed-through from my headphones. Bad idea - Someone else noticed a high pitched whine of an artifact left behind. These days I prefer a Gate - ReaGate in this case - also in your ReaPlugs collection. I've used it to isolate Kick & Snare on a live drum track, isolate a Vox take from an acoustic guitar, etc.
FIR is only good for constant signal like fan, buzz etc.and will always have some artifacts due to signal phase inversion. I personally would not gate or remove any bleed from a drum set recording. Treat it as one single instrument.
@@RecordingStudio9 What I was thinking of is sidechaining kick to bass- making sure only kick hits get through. Plus I use free SK10 rom Wavesfactory to beef up the sub kick. The only other trick for sidechaining I can think of would be to duplicate the kick track & set up the 2nd one to sidechain to bass *only* - cut out the send to the parent track or Master bus. THEN use a Gate on your new "Ghost Kick," but leave the one going to the Master as is.
Thanks nice vid i will be doing this on my recodings this week!...but hey i am wondering if you think this will be good if i have noise that went into my microphone from my headphones?....i was not wearing a sound cancelling headset while recording so i know some headphone noise went into my mic while recording, do you think this well help?
Thanks for watching. Depending on how loud the audio bleed is, I would not worry. Any bleeds between vocals can be edited and deleted for clean vocals.
But what do you do if the only audio you have for producing the profile is the one that contains the noise? I did a piano recording yesterday when all of my in-laws were here and I sure as all heck-fire aint asking those folk back again any time soon.
Is this the same as a sound inverter? Curious if the software is simply copying the noise profile, invert it, then one can use that inversion spectrum over the same music.
No, this process simply detects the noise floor level at all frequency range and removes them if the signal falls below the threshold at that frequency.
My mic is a blue yeti and i have my pc on the desk and the background noise and my voice is reaaaaaaly loud for some reason so hopefully this works for me
Downloaded 64 bit Reaper, installed it but Cakewalk by Bandlab only shows me "32-bit" plugs which don't work. I'm trying to remove hiss from a vocal track. How do I get this plugin to work, before I uninstall it and go find another way to get rid of hiss in an audio file? Thanks.
How would one go about using this for a multitrack? Just copy the procedure for each track? I'm working on an audio book, trying to clean it up best as I can.
You could do that if your PC can handle the process, else, you can process and render (record the track with the FX) each track and move the FX chain to the next track.
I tried this tutorial the same way to clean AC noise from bassy vocal sound with ReaFir and end up with artifacts instead, same as this vocal when said "when you". Do you have any idea how to fix it?
You could try an expander or noise gate instead. Switch ReaFir's mode to Gate and see if that works for you (drag the slider to the left not right to make it more effective). You can also try some of the free expander plug ins out there but there's a decent one built into Ardour. Reaper also has ReaGate, but I don't like that one very much, like most of Reaper's included plug ins. You could also try Waves Z-Noise or NS-1, or WNS. I'd try to learn expanders and gates though, because it helps to know how the traditional stuff worked before fancy plug ins were everywhere.
Why is it always true that the demonstrator clicks and gets one thing the student clicks the same thing and gets something very different? Quite MADDENING, really. I click the arrows and there is NO COCKOs
Things do change over time. But this should still give you so guidance. Did you install Reaper plugins? Did you restart cakewalk and refresh vst folder?