Keeper Mallinson on 16/5/2010 at 00:56
Yes indeed. I'm talking about Des'ree's "Kissing You", the instrumental version. It has a whispered line from Leo that I'm removing. I've been trying to remove the vocal using Wavosaur, though it's replaced with a small amount of distortion, albeit only barely noticeable. Thanks for your advice thus far.
witherflower on 16/5/2010 at 01:11
Quote Posted by Keeper Mallinson
Yes indeed. I'm talking about Des'ree's "Kissing You", the instrumental version. It has a whispered line from Leo that I'm removing. I've been trying to remove the vocal using Wavosaur, though it's replaced with a small amount of distortion, albeit only barely noticeable. Thanks for your advice thus far.
Would it sound too funny if you cut the entire whispering part and blended the first part to the strings starting right after? Dunno', but it might work.
Congratulations, by the way.
Vernon on 16/5/2010 at 11:38
you might be able to just cut out the centre channel - depends how it was recorded tbh
henke on 16/5/2010 at 14:53
This is something I've been wondering about recently as well. Could anyone in-the-know explain the process of how this is done? What apps to use, and whether a mp3 will work or if you need the original CD-track?
Turtle on 16/5/2010 at 17:42
I have nothing helpful to add, but I wanted to say congratulations, Kyle.
Muzman on 16/5/2010 at 21:35
If there's a bit of break where Leo whispers by himself you could try a noise reduction filter on it. Very little is mixed discrete left/centre/right these days, particulrly in pop. You might be lucky and his whispering is pretty distinct in frequency and a plain old EQ could do it. But anyway.
(We don't want pictures! Well, we do, but we want Cake!)
Volitions Advocate on 18/5/2010 at 02:07
Do you have a .WAV or some other lossess format? It might be easier to do with less degradation that way. I'll give it a try if you like. I just need the file.
Keeper Mallinson on 18/5/2010 at 15:40
I'd love that. I have both a .wav and an .mp3, though the .wav is exponentially larger.
Martin Karne on 21/5/2010 at 06:57
And where in the world wide web that .wav might be located?
:erg: