Looks pretty dodgy to me. Designed for Kareoke.... wow, must be hi-end.
___________________
1 out of every 4 people in this country are mentally disturbed. Look at your 3 closest friends. If they seem okay, then you're the one.
Jun-16-2004 14:04
Synergie
tranceaddict
Registered: Apr 2004
Location: Latvia, Riga
quote:
Originally posted by Mr.Mystery
Well, technically you can. However, you'd be removing any sounds within the same frequency range as well.
Not true! It's not about frequency analize, but vocals phase and paning analize! That is why cant remove wet effects!
Jun-16-2004 14:05
Mr.Mystery
Static Guru
Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Vantaa
quote:
Originally posted by Synergie
Not true! It's not about frequency analize, but vocals phase and paning analize! That is why cant remove wet effects!
If any such technology was anything close to perfect, there'd be a capellas of pretty much every vocal track in history floating around the net in good quality.
If you want to try to remove vocals, then attempt to do so by careful reconstruction of the track.
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"When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading."
Jun-16-2004 14:15
alanzo
The Equalizer Womanizer
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Boston, MA
curious.. if you knew about those 2 programs than how come you asked how to do it in the first place?
Vocal removers work by singling out the frequencies of the vocal.. the reason the program can do this is becuase vocals are very often the only part of a song (except for the kick) that is panned right in the center..
it then cancels out or isolates those frequencies.. at the same time you will also remove all the other instruments in that frequency range..
perfect isolation of the vocal alone in a full waveform is impossible..
a-capellas are either gotten straight from the producer.. or off of the vinyl if it is included..