T
thug lord
New member
can anyone tell me if there is a program out there that can take the vocals out of the songs r mute the curse words without delete the music. for example make an edited version of a cd that have curse words.
Blue Bear Sound said:Uh... no....
You can't UNMIX a song any more than you can separate a cake back into flour, eggs, water, and milk after it's been baked......
corban said:The answer to your question primarily depends on whether you have access to the original tracks.
And your point is?LRosario said:Great, the cake speech again.
Just for the sake of conversation, I find this story this guy gave you a bit on the dubious side. I could be wrong, but I get the impression that asking the computer to dissemble a final mix is similar in complexity to asking a computer to look at the position of the balls on a billiard table and then construct a movie that plays backwards to roll the balls back into their original position. Without knowledge of the actual original position, it's impossible.masteringhouse said:I was speaking to a producer who mentioned that there's a physicist who created software that will allow you to separate tracks from a stereo mix.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Just for the sake of conversation, I find this story this guy gave you a bit on the dubious side. I could be wrong, but I get the impression that asking the computer to dissemble a final mix is similar in complexity to asking a computer to look at the position of the balls on a billiard table and then construct a movie that plays backwards to roll the balls back into their original position. Without knowledge of the actual original position, it's impossible.
Even with knowlede of the original position it's still impossible in the case of the pool balls. In the music mix problem, knowledge of the original tracks makes the problem entirely unnecessary.
G.
Yeah, I suppose it comes down to the working definition of "separate". If there were 100% seperation, then one would be talking about the original tracks (including whatever individual processing like EQ or verb were added to them, of course.).masteringhouse said:G., by "separate the tracks" I'm sure he meant separate the instruments, vocals, etc. not recreate the original virgin tracks.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Yeah, I suppose it comes down to the working definition of "separate". If there were 100% seperation, then one would be talking about the original tracks (including whatever individual processing like EQ or verb were added to them, of course.).
Not arguing anything here, just find it an interesting topic to consider.
G.
I'd take that even further. In these digital days where expense and size of tapes is not the issue that it was, I see little reason not to keep all files from original trackings (optionally including alternate takes) to the DAW software project/session mix files. When you can store a typical 3-minute, 20-track song on a single CD or full tracking and mix files for 200 songs on a single 120GB HD (and that's all before losless Zip-style compression for storage purposes), I see no non-rights-related reason not to hold on to everything for a sufficient period of time.masteringhouse said:This might also be a good argument for saving mixes as stems along with a stereo mix.
SouthSIDE Glen said:I'd take that even further. In these digital days where expense and size of tapes is not the issue that it was, I see little reason not to keep all files from original trackings (optionally including alternate takes) to the DAW software project/session mix files. When you can store a typical 3-minute, 20-track song on a single CD or full tracking and mix files for 200 songs on a single 120GB HD (and that's all before losless Zip-style compression for storage purposes), I see no non-rights-related reason not to hold on to everything for a sufficient period of time.
G.
Yeah, that's a good point.masteringhouse said:The only issue I see is different session formats. If recording using say SAW or Nuendo, it becomes difficult to later import these sessions into Pro Tools or other software.
Also you have issues with incompatible plug-ins, automation, etc.
Having stems takes care of the above if effects are printed along with the track.