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Mon 27 Oct 2003, 15:24
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Junior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 132
Joined: 13-Sep 03
From: - US
Member No.: 24,676
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first off- no! don't buy a G3 iBook!! you can get a G4 iBook starting at $1099 now!! ram shmam! worry about ram later- get the new iBook!
ahem...
anyway, the answer to your question is 'no', you can't strip vocals from a track with any sw that i'm aware of. individual audio files don't work that way- there is no distinct number of elements squished into them that can be edited out like a SearchReplace in a word doc or something. it's a mixdown you hear and all the sounds are together now like soup- okay maybe soup isn't the right metaphor, but still.... not only are all the tracks mixed down, but vocals also take up a good bit of low mid and high frequencies, so eq'ing the voice out is not an option either.
the one exception to this is that there are some strange early stereo recordings of like The Beatles and stuff where the ppl who remastered the original music to stereo panned some intruments all the way to one side. with a track like that you can get that instrument out of the mix just by panning left or right, but that's not the way things are mixed these days.
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Kit: Dual Ghz G4, Vaio 2.6ghz GRV670 notebook. Software: Reaktor, Reason, Ableton Live. Leanings: Laptop performance, jazz guitar, singing.
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Tue 28 Oct 2003, 00:33
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Moderator In Chief (MIC)
Group: Editors
Posts: 15,189
Joined: 23-Dec 01
From: Paris - FR
Member No.: 2,758
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Well if voice is center you can remove it by getting rid of what is common to both sides. Cancelation of phases if you want the dirty name But it'll work only if it's dead center. Now for the technique: you put out of phase one channel and send the result (mix of the 2 channels) to mono. You may loose much more than the voice only… but there's NO miracle here. Even on high end $$$ mega DAW.
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