I am working with a two channel (stereo) audio file that was created using two microphones to record a conversation. The mics were set up to achieve maximum separation of the voices. The result is that the conversation sounds like ping-pong and would not really work for a radio broadcast, even though this is stereo FM.
My question: Is there a way to somehow blend the channels so there is no extreme separation, but yet the end result does have a sense that the parties are sitting across from one another. If that's not possible, is there some way to combine the channels so that both sides of the conversation are kept and the end result is quite mono.
I have in the past taken a stereo file recorded/created by a single channel microphone using DC7 Record capability, split this file into two mono files and then recreated a pseudo stereo file by copying the Left channel into both channels of the new file. That worked because there was nothing but residual noise in the right channel.
However, I now have valid information in both channels so can't do this.
Can anyone help? Merci, thanks, gracias, etc.
eric
My question: Is there a way to somehow blend the channels so there is no extreme separation, but yet the end result does have a sense that the parties are sitting across from one another. If that's not possible, is there some way to combine the channels so that both sides of the conversation are kept and the end result is quite mono.
I have in the past taken a stereo file recorded/created by a single channel microphone using DC7 Record capability, split this file into two mono files and then recreated a pseudo stereo file by copying the Left channel into both channels of the new file. That worked because there was nothing but residual noise in the right channel.
However, I now have valid information in both channels so can't do this.
Can anyone help? Merci, thanks, gracias, etc.
eric
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