R
rgraves
New member
Hey all,
Got something I'm doing for a friend, he has an old set of recordings he did of 35 of his songs, just acoustic guitar and voice, and he recorded them all on a SONY tape deck recorder! I know, it's basically a lost cause, but they actually sound ridiculously good...it's amazing how all the levels are just perfect and the sound quality is actually quite good. It was recorded with no microphone at all, just the built in mic, haha.
So, a family member of his transfered the tape to 2 CDs and now I have it. What I'm wondering is, just for the sake of fun and to give him a little something I wanted to basically improve the volume. The poor guy has wanted all his life to record in a studio and has never had the money. I am going to finally record him in my home studio when he gets out here, that should be tons better than what he had before, but he recorded on that sony tape deck 22 years ago.
So, I went ahead and played around a little last night with the files and at the very least could do a normallization. But I wondered if anyone else might have some suggestions? I was thinking compression/or EQ, the thing is even though it sounds darn good, it of course has a fair amount of tape hiss or something like that.
In order to compensate for that, is there a frequency range I could try to EQ a bit? Should I avoid compression with fear that the noise floor would be raised? oR is there a way to set the compressor so that it won't bring up the hiss too much. I was going to try some basic effects to make it sound less redundant, like some reverb, but it's all one track, is there anything you guys would avoid??
Thanks for any help!
Got something I'm doing for a friend, he has an old set of recordings he did of 35 of his songs, just acoustic guitar and voice, and he recorded them all on a SONY tape deck recorder! I know, it's basically a lost cause, but they actually sound ridiculously good...it's amazing how all the levels are just perfect and the sound quality is actually quite good. It was recorded with no microphone at all, just the built in mic, haha.
So, a family member of his transfered the tape to 2 CDs and now I have it. What I'm wondering is, just for the sake of fun and to give him a little something I wanted to basically improve the volume. The poor guy has wanted all his life to record in a studio and has never had the money. I am going to finally record him in my home studio when he gets out here, that should be tons better than what he had before, but he recorded on that sony tape deck 22 years ago.
So, I went ahead and played around a little last night with the files and at the very least could do a normallization. But I wondered if anyone else might have some suggestions? I was thinking compression/or EQ, the thing is even though it sounds darn good, it of course has a fair amount of tape hiss or something like that.
In order to compensate for that, is there a frequency range I could try to EQ a bit? Should I avoid compression with fear that the noise floor would be raised? oR is there a way to set the compressor so that it won't bring up the hiss too much. I was going to try some basic effects to make it sound less redundant, like some reverb, but it's all one track, is there anything you guys would avoid??
Thanks for any help!