Transferring analog to digital |
Wed 26 Jun 2002, 20:41
Post
#1
|
|
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 2 Joined: 26-Jun 02 Member No.: 5,279 |
Hi everyone-
I recently discovered how to transfer my audio cassette tape tracks to CD, and have a program (Cool Edit Pro 2.0) that can clean up the tracks by removing a lot of the hiss. My problem is, I want it to sound 'recording-studio' good. Is there any program out there that can do this? I mean, having no hiss at all, and completely transferring the analog music to a digital format. Any help is greatly appreciated! Thanks Billy |
|
|
Thu 27 Jun 2002, 05:24
Post
#2
|
|
Group: Posts: 0 Joined: -- Member No.: 0 |
No, there's no way to go from cassette to 'recording studio quality'. That would be like going from Fritos to 'fresh corn'.
Are these cassettes commercial releases or something you have recorded yourself? |
|
|
Thu 27 Jun 2002, 17:32
Post
#3
|
|
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 2 Joined: 26-Jun 02 Member No.: 5,279 |
They're actually both: I have a cassette tape of music recorded off TV shows, as well as commercial tapes.
Billy |
|
|
Tue 2 Jul 2002, 23:00
Post
#4
|
|
Group: Posts: 0 Joined: -- Member No.: 0 |
You're probably doing as good a job as you can. You can edit the annoying hiss from between tracks and be sure to "normalize" each track.
|
|
|
Mon 8 Jul 2002, 06:30
Post
#5
|
|
Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 495 Joined: 12-Oct 01 From: Chandler - US Member No.: 2,003 |
If you are "pushing your sound card, it will cause hiss. Make shure the gain is all the way down on the sound card.
-------------------- kaboombahchuck
------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
Tue 9 Jul 2002, 22:46
Post
#6
|
|
Group: Posts: 0 Joined: -- Member No.: 0 |
Cool Edit is not a Mac program...
they make something called "audio clean-up" though... What you really want to do long-term is invest in a good sound card and quality mastering software (Waves, TC Electronics, Soundforge etc.) If I owned a PC I would go with Cakewalk also, btw. |
|
|
Fri 12 Jul 2002, 04:14
Post
#7
|
|
Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 393 Joined: 11-Jun 02 From: London - UK Member No.: 5,044 |
this site IS called MACmusic!
BagHun said it all really. ALL noise reduction plugins other than maybe, CEDAR, degrade the original signal. if the original signal is from cassette your master will never sound "recording studio good". as public enemy said: "don't believe the hype." -------------------- one for all and all for one...
|
|
|
Sun 25 Aug 2002, 23:50
Post
#8
|
|
Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 120 Joined: 10-Jul 02 From: Minneapolis - US Member No.: 5,668 |
Cool edit Pro is a good program if you like the PC Blue Screen
SparkXL is a very good mac program. I use it to transfer cilent's LPs to CD Man it's a very slick program -------------------- BING BING BLEEP ERRRRRRR[I]
|
|
|
Mon 9 Sep 2002, 10:35
Post
#9
|
|
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 2 Joined: 09-Sep 02 From: HK - HK Member No.: 7,494 |
Hi Icedudeweb et all
I need to transfer my analog music from cassette to my G4 DP, no audio in/out ports only firewire and usb. What hardware/software do I need. Any advice much appreciated. Thanks Mac |
|
|
Tue 10 Sep 2002, 01:28
Post
#10
|
|
Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 393 Joined: 11-Jun 02 From: London - UK Member No.: 5,044 |
hi watashimac,
you WILL need an audio interface, that's for sure! these days, even the cheap stuff is pretty good (and we ARE talking cassette transfers here!), this is really a question of budget, because there are also numerous software solutions available. sorry to say, but can you give an indication of how much you're prepared to spend? it WILL help in trying to provide an answer to your query. peace, later... -------------------- one for all and all for one...
|
|
|
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members: