O
Oliver33
New member
Hi. First post. All help appreciated.
Twenty years ago I conducted about sixty hours’ worth of interviews that I recorded on tape. Back then I was only interested in the info I was getting, so the sound quality is pretty bad. Fast-forward twenty years, and I’d like to preserve the interviews by digitalizing them. But I’ve hit a few snags.
My main problem is the background noise – not the intermittent noises that are easily distinguishable from voices (ticking clocks, birdsong etc.) – I don't care about those – but a persistent hiss across the entire frequency range. On some tapes it practically drowns out the conversation. (When I play the actual tapes on an old cassetter player, the voices are far better distinguishable than when I play the files on my computer.)
I’ve been using Izotope RX 4 to deal with the issue, and I’m fine with what I’ve been able to achieve on most of the recordings, but there are about ten hours’ worth where "equalizing," "gaining" and "dehumming" aren’t good enough, "leveling," "denoising" and "deconstructing" distort the vocals too much and "declicking" has no noticeable effect at all. Is there some other program that can deal with the issue better than RX can?
Also, could appreciably better audio be achieved with a better digitalization setup? My cassette player is a Sanyo BassXpander, it’s connected to my computer via a DeLock Sound Adapter 7.1, the program I use for playing the tapes into my computer is Audacity 2.1.0, and my computer is an iMac (OS X 10.9.4, 21.5 inches).
What could I upgrade that would make a real difference? Am I correct in assuming that a quality „audio interface“ instead of a twenty-dollar DeLock Sound Adapter would be helpful? If so, what should I be looking for in an audio interface for my particular purposes (speech with background hiss on magnetic tape, mono). And what price range are we talking about (I'm willing to pay more to get more)?
Two related questions:
– I’d like to digitalize the audio with Izotope RX instead of Audacity, but RX doesn’t list the DeLock Sound Adapter under Preferences/Audio/Input device (although it does list it under „Output device“). I couldn’t find a fix via Google. Any ideas?
– Most of the sound files I’ve derived from the tapes have sections of varying length that exhibit numerous brief gaps or jumps in the audio (for some reason this doesn't apply to the first seven tapes, which don’t have this problem). The gaps are definitely computer-generated: they’re not present on the actual tapes when played on the cassette recorder. The gaps occur even when I take care to close all the other programs on my Mac before I record. Audacity’s preferences are on their defaults values. Suggestions?
Again, any input would be greatly appreciated.
Twenty years ago I conducted about sixty hours’ worth of interviews that I recorded on tape. Back then I was only interested in the info I was getting, so the sound quality is pretty bad. Fast-forward twenty years, and I’d like to preserve the interviews by digitalizing them. But I’ve hit a few snags.
My main problem is the background noise – not the intermittent noises that are easily distinguishable from voices (ticking clocks, birdsong etc.) – I don't care about those – but a persistent hiss across the entire frequency range. On some tapes it practically drowns out the conversation. (When I play the actual tapes on an old cassetter player, the voices are far better distinguishable than when I play the files on my computer.)
I’ve been using Izotope RX 4 to deal with the issue, and I’m fine with what I’ve been able to achieve on most of the recordings, but there are about ten hours’ worth where "equalizing," "gaining" and "dehumming" aren’t good enough, "leveling," "denoising" and "deconstructing" distort the vocals too much and "declicking" has no noticeable effect at all. Is there some other program that can deal with the issue better than RX can?
Also, could appreciably better audio be achieved with a better digitalization setup? My cassette player is a Sanyo BassXpander, it’s connected to my computer via a DeLock Sound Adapter 7.1, the program I use for playing the tapes into my computer is Audacity 2.1.0, and my computer is an iMac (OS X 10.9.4, 21.5 inches).
What could I upgrade that would make a real difference? Am I correct in assuming that a quality „audio interface“ instead of a twenty-dollar DeLock Sound Adapter would be helpful? If so, what should I be looking for in an audio interface for my particular purposes (speech with background hiss on magnetic tape, mono). And what price range are we talking about (I'm willing to pay more to get more)?
Two related questions:
– I’d like to digitalize the audio with Izotope RX instead of Audacity, but RX doesn’t list the DeLock Sound Adapter under Preferences/Audio/Input device (although it does list it under „Output device“). I couldn’t find a fix via Google. Any ideas?
– Most of the sound files I’ve derived from the tapes have sections of varying length that exhibit numerous brief gaps or jumps in the audio (for some reason this doesn't apply to the first seven tapes, which don’t have this problem). The gaps are definitely computer-generated: they’re not present on the actual tapes when played on the cassette recorder. The gaps occur even when I take care to close all the other programs on my Mac before I record. Audacity’s preferences are on their defaults values. Suggestions?
Again, any input would be greatly appreciated.