P
progmr
New member
Hello:
I recently recorded my church band (8 singers, piano, guitar, acoustic guitar, windsynth, drums/congas) during a large assembly in a gym. I used a stereo condensor pair located 50' away 14' high, into a Alesis mixer out to a laptop using Power Tracks. I now have a .SEQ file that I need to clean up.
Can anyone suggest what steps I should take? It seems anything I've done seems to undo something else (e.g. hiss removal undoes eq settings, etc) The recording is pretty good in my opinion but there is some hiss I'd like to remove and the individual instruments are not "distinct" enough. I am willing to spend some $$ to add any plug ins I don't have.
Is there an application that isolate the individual parts into tracks?
Thanks to any that respond. I know it is a wide open question but I don't want to waste my time through trial and error if there are some golden rules and steps I can follow. I'll can post a short MP3 on a website to give an example of what I'm up against if it will help.
Thanks again!
I recently recorded my church band (8 singers, piano, guitar, acoustic guitar, windsynth, drums/congas) during a large assembly in a gym. I used a stereo condensor pair located 50' away 14' high, into a Alesis mixer out to a laptop using Power Tracks. I now have a .SEQ file that I need to clean up.
Can anyone suggest what steps I should take? It seems anything I've done seems to undo something else (e.g. hiss removal undoes eq settings, etc) The recording is pretty good in my opinion but there is some hiss I'd like to remove and the individual instruments are not "distinct" enough. I am willing to spend some $$ to add any plug ins I don't have.
Is there an application that isolate the individual parts into tracks?
Thanks to any that respond. I know it is a wide open question but I don't want to waste my time through trial and error if there are some golden rules and steps I can follow. I'll can post a short MP3 on a website to give an example of what I'm up against if it will help.
Thanks again!
That's kind of far even for an orchestra. Maybe a giant pipe organ . . . or a large concert with all the sound pumping through the mains . . . but that's probably why the recording isn't very distinct. If you had a closer mic placement (like 10-15 feet), you might have enough stereo separation between instruments to do some mid-side processing (or even left-right differences), that can help get at individual instruments in a mix. But at 50 feet, your stereo image is probably entirely reflections.