Effects, stereo, maxmatch.

bruce

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Bruce Toews
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On Sun, 4 Feb 2007, hank smith wrote:

> where is this found it?
> I had no idea this feature was in there
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bruce Toews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "PC audio discussion list. " <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sunday, February 04, 2007 9:40 AM
> Subject: Re: Sound Forge help with mixing voice overs
>
>
>> I don't know if Sound Forge can do this, but gold Wave has a channel Match
>> feature for exactly this type of purpose. What it effectively does is
>> maximize the two stereo channels so that the peaks in both are at the
>> maximum volume without clipping. this effectively evens out the stereo
>> channels in a situation such as yours.
>>
>> Bruce
>>
>> --
>> Bruce Toews
>> Skype ID: o.canada
>> E-mail and MSN/Windows Messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> LiveJournal: http://brucetola.livejournal.com
>> Radio Show and Podcast: http://www.totw.net
>> Web Site (including info on my weekly commentaries): http://www.ogts.net
>> Info on the Best TV Show of All Time: http://www.cornergas.com
>>
>> On Sat, 3 Feb 2007, Matthew Bullis wrote:
>>
>>> Hello, well it's using the technique of voice overs in Sound Forge, but
>>> my
>>> purpose is a little different. I've used the paste special menu, but it
>>> just
>>> doesn't turn out like I hoped. I have a concert recording where the
>>> singing
>>> and guitar is more to one side of the audio track than another. It's
>>> difficult to listen to like that, and I don't want to discard the stereo
>>> image because of the audience ambience. What I figured on doing was
>>> having
>>> one file be where the audio is on the left side mostly, and taking the
>>> exact
>>> same thing and swapping channels for the other file. So we have two
>>> files,
>>> one where the audio leans towards the left with audience ambience
>>> happening
>>> on the right, and the other file which is the exact opposite, with the
>>> audio
>>> leaning towards the right and audience ambience to the left. I figured
>>> I'd
>>> select all the data in one of the files, which one doesn't really matter,
>>> then flip over to the other file and use the paste special menu. I select
>>> mix, and then select the normal voiceover mode. The result leans one way
>>> or
>>> the other, and doesn't balance out. This sounds like it should work in
>>> theory. Is there something I've done wrong? If I did a straight channel
>>> copy, then that means losing the ambience on the channel where the guitar
>>> and voice are less prominent. Would I have to cancel out the less
>>> prominent
>>> channels first, then add them back in later? Any help would be
>>> appreciated,
>>> as I'd like a nice balanced recording.
>>> Matthew
>>>
>>>
>>>
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