Hi,
I recently purchased DC7 primarily to work on a cassette recording made by my wife, but will also use it in my ongoing efforts to digitive what remains of my LP collection. I've been using other software on this latter project so I'm somewhat familiar with reducing noise on LP recordings, but I'm very much a novice with DC7.
Anyway, back to the issue at hand. My wife is a college student and had to do an interview for a class. She used a cheap, hand-held cassette recorder and it turned our very badly. She tested the recorder ahead of time and it worked fine, then did the interview in the college library. The resulting recording has a LOT of background noise, and not just simple hum or hiss. Since it was made in the college library I have to wonder if they don't have some sort of cell phone jammer going on there, and maybe that's what caused this very loud noise?
The noise is so bad that it often drowns out the voices. My wife has to transcribe this recording and is having a very difficult time with it. I've had some success cleaning this up using a combination of Band Pass, the "1890 Edison 2 Minute White Wax Cylinder" filter with the Keep Residue option, and then the Auto Spectrum CNF Very Aggressive filter. Still, the voices are very hard to understand in much of the recording.
Any suggestions on what to try? What I've done so far is largely trial and error. I thought that Punch and Crunch might offer some help by either bringing out the voices or subduing the noise but haven't had much luck there. Then again, I don't really know what I'm doing. For what it's worth, my wife is interviewing another woman and both have relatively deep voices for women.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Mark
I recently purchased DC7 primarily to work on a cassette recording made by my wife, but will also use it in my ongoing efforts to digitive what remains of my LP collection. I've been using other software on this latter project so I'm somewhat familiar with reducing noise on LP recordings, but I'm very much a novice with DC7.
Anyway, back to the issue at hand. My wife is a college student and had to do an interview for a class. She used a cheap, hand-held cassette recorder and it turned our very badly. She tested the recorder ahead of time and it worked fine, then did the interview in the college library. The resulting recording has a LOT of background noise, and not just simple hum or hiss. Since it was made in the college library I have to wonder if they don't have some sort of cell phone jammer going on there, and maybe that's what caused this very loud noise?
The noise is so bad that it often drowns out the voices. My wife has to transcribe this recording and is having a very difficult time with it. I've had some success cleaning this up using a combination of Band Pass, the "1890 Edison 2 Minute White Wax Cylinder" filter with the Keep Residue option, and then the Auto Spectrum CNF Very Aggressive filter. Still, the voices are very hard to understand in much of the recording.
Any suggestions on what to try? What I've done so far is largely trial and error. I thought that Punch and Crunch might offer some help by either bringing out the voices or subduing the noise but haven't had much luck there. Then again, I don't really know what I'm doing. For what it's worth, my wife is interviewing another woman and both have relatively deep voices for women.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Mark
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