Best Software For Recording From Vinyl Records

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floydharris

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I am going to record from LPs to my PC and would like to find the most user friendly software program. I have been told that Groove Mechanic and Wave Repair are 2 good programs to do this. Does anyone have any comments about the features and ease of using either one of these programs or is there a better one to use for this purpose. Thanks....
 
I would try reaper first for free, using the ReaFIR plugin in noise reduction mode

If that doesnt work then I would spring for cool edit/audition which has some really cool scientific tools to fix things
 
I agree with PipeLine that Adobe Audition (1.5 which is what I used to use) has a lot of really good noise removal stuff and other built in plugins.

I use Reaper now but have never really messed with ReaFIR.
 
Multitracking software seems like overkill for this task.

I'd recommend this.
 
MadAudio said:
Multitracking software seems like overkill for this task.

I'd recommend this.

Overkill? Its 69.00$ cheaper with reaper if he can do it in 30 days or less

But yeah, Sound Forge's click removal tools will probably make your record recording experience a lot less painful!
 
pipelineaudio said:
Overkill? Its 69.00$ cheaper with reaper if he can do it in 30 days or less

But yeah, Sound Forge's click removal tools will probably make your record recording experience a lot less painful!
Sometimes the pencil tool is all you need depending on how well the record has been cared for. I've been digitizing a lot of vinyl lately, and rarely use more than that.

And maybe "overkill" was the wrong word. ;)
 
I think the most important thing will be your turntable and the quality of your LPs.


However, Reaper does seeem like a good solution, and if you're not happy with it, it's not as thought you've dished out any cash to get it..
 
MessianicDreams said:
I think the most important thing will be your turntable and the quality of your LPs.


However, Reaper does seeem like a good solution, and if you're not happy with it, it's not as thought you've dished out any cash to get it..
Yes, and a quality RIAA phono preamp with a faithful EQ curve. He can't just simply plug the turntable directly into his computer. Unless his turntable is unusual and has line outputs.
 
Which software you use will have no impact on the quality of the actual recording, the features of the software will help when trying to clean up the recording.

Get a new stylus, wash the records with warm water and detergent. Mild dish detergrent works well or simple green and a very soft brush. Rinse with distilled water
 
Waverepair is written specifically for this purpose & no other. Excellent, downloaded & CHEAP PLUS free upgrades as the author does 'em.
 
Groove mechanic sweeps with a very broad brush & can do an OK job. I used it three times & gave up. I've done well over 100 LPs with W repair & am very happy. I recently did an old james Brown record I bought from the US "Thinking About Little Willie Johns & A Few Nice Things" The claim was that it was mint. I played it & it had quite a few clicks, pops, smears & some occasional noise. I recorded it into waverepair & processed it manually & the CD is now a close to mint as my ears could hear. WR will point to individual clicks etc, you can zoom in & slice it off, replace it with a matching section or EQ it away. If the record is rare, greatly loved, not released on CD etc - in other words it's worth the effort - WR is the go. If the CD can be had for US$7 or so - the work involved in doing a great job isn't worth it.
Waverepair can be brilliant - the degree will be up to you. None better at present than WR. I've spent years on this I did a LOT of research.
The quality of the CD will relate to source material - I lot can be fixed. Really bad LPs can be made OK, EQs, filters, compression. amplification, channel manipulation, clicks, pops, smears, background & mechanical noise can all be dealt with in WR BUT the worse the prob, the longer it takes to get good results. Hiss, crackle & noise removal can degrade the quality if poorly managed.You need to record the lead in & run out tracks as well as the space between tracks to get the "fingerprints" needed to treat these things.
 
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