Group,
In the latest IEEE Spectrum Magazine (September 2009), is an interesting article (The Making of the Beatles : Rock Band) on an audio subject.
It seems that the people behind the "Guitar Hero" Software wanted to come up with a new game using all the Beatles songs. For the game, the individual instruments and vocals needed to be separated from the original audio songs.
The separate instruments sounds are needed to support the games ability to "judge" how well you play all (not something that I would want to do).
Anyway... the engineering challenge was to "pull out" the individual instruments from the original 4 track recordings. In the original early recordings, the vocals/guitar's would often be on the same track. Thus, they needed a way to filter the sound.
While the details in the story on just how they did this were not many, the article said that using analog filters to pull out the instruments didn't work and instead they using ~Audio Forensic Software~ that made it possible to separate and pull out each instrument from the total sound.
Any insight into if DC products were used ? Is it easy to do this ?
Regards,
Marc
In the latest IEEE Spectrum Magazine (September 2009), is an interesting article (The Making of the Beatles : Rock Band) on an audio subject.
It seems that the people behind the "Guitar Hero" Software wanted to come up with a new game using all the Beatles songs. For the game, the individual instruments and vocals needed to be separated from the original audio songs.
The separate instruments sounds are needed to support the games ability to "judge" how well you play all (not something that I would want to do).
Anyway... the engineering challenge was to "pull out" the individual instruments from the original 4 track recordings. In the original early recordings, the vocals/guitar's would often be on the same track. Thus, they needed a way to filter the sound.
While the details in the story on just how they did this were not many, the article said that using analog filters to pull out the instruments didn't work and instead they using ~Audio Forensic Software~ that made it possible to separate and pull out each instrument from the total sound.
Any insight into if DC products were used ? Is it easy to do this ?
Regards,
Marc
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