Does anyone know any tricks for cleaning up music recorded onto a PC from a cassette tape? I have some music I recorded onto my PC from a cassette tape and was able to reduce much of the hiss (using Audacity) and applied an equalizer (using GoldWave), and overall I like the results. However, there are a couple things I'd still like to improve - Specifically, there's one track where the right channel drops out for a moment and comes back.
There's also an occasional popping sound here and there. I'm not sure of the best way to clean up those spots.
For the track where the right channel drops out for a moment and comes back, I've tried doing a channel mix (using GoldWave), but that changes the quality of the sound a bit - It doesn't sound as full as before. As far as removing the popping sounds, I'm not sure of the best way to do that either.
If there aren't too many pops, you can actually select the click in Audacity and use the "Repair" effect in Audacity. I think it's mainly intended for digital distortion, but I've used it to repair analog clicks and pops successfully too. The trick is you have to really zoom way in one the wave form and choose just the pop/clip portion to repair. If you select too wide of a portion of the audio (more 128 samples), the effect won't do anything but display an error to you.
With regard to drop-outs, you could probably use the opposite channel audio to possible fill in the missing "level" in the affect channel, but it'll still probably sound a little odd (especially with headphones).
Pro-Audio might be the better message area to talk about this subject, but it does interest me.
cassette tape? I have some music I recorded onto my PC from a cassette
tape and was able to reduce much of the hiss (using Audacity) and applied
an equalizer (using GoldWave), and overall I like the results. However, there are a couple things I'd still like to improve - Specifically, there's one track where the right channel drops out for a moment and comes back. There's also an occasional popping sound here and there. I'm not sure of the best way to clean up those spots.
For the track where the right channel drops out for a moment and comes
back, I've tried doing a channel mix (using GoldWave), but that changes the quality of the sound a bit - It doesn't sound as full as before. As far as removing the popping sounds, I'm not sure of the best way to do that
If there aren't too many pops, you can actually select the click in Audacity and use the "Repair" effect in Audacity. I think it's mainly intended for digital distortion, but I've used it to repair analog clicks and pops successfully too.
The trick is you have to really zoom way in one
the wave form and choose just the pop/clip portion to repair. If you select too wide of a portion of the audio (more 128 samples), the effect won't do anything but display an error to you.
Does anyone know any tricks for cleaning up music recorded onto a PC from a cassette tape? I have some music I recorded onto my PC from a cassette tape
Does anyone know any tricks for cleaning up music recorded onto a PC
from a cassette tape? I have some music I recorded onto my PC from a
cassette tape
I fix pops manually. Find the pop location and zoom in. You should find a dicontinuity in the wave that causes the pop, you just need to move the dots on the wave a bit to make it go away. Just make it more sine-curve like.
For the lost stereo track, cannot help there, the only thing to do would be to copy the other track, say left, on top of the right, muted track.
These days, I'm going to the other direction. I copy music from PC to cassettes and listen to them using my Aiwa (a walkman like). And of course buy old cassettes from thrift stores.
These days, I'm going to the other direction. I copy music from PC
to cassettes and listen to them using my Aiwa (a walkman like). And
of course buy old cassettes from thrift stores.
These days, I'm going to the other direction. I copy music from PC
to cassettes and listen to them using my Aiwa (a walkman like). And
of course buy old cassettes from thrift stores.
I had a convertible in college with a theft-proof 8-track tape player. Had a great time picking up oldies on 8-Track at the thrift stores!
I had a convertible in college with a theft-proof 8-track tape player. Had a great time picking up oldies on 8-Track at the thrift stores!
Interesting, I hadn't thought about that. I'm not sure if the audio editors typically use (GoldWave and Audacity) allow that, but they probably do.
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