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  1. This page has been moved to the new wiki by icyjumbo
  2. Noisecleaning
  3. Noisecleaning with the free Audacity 1.3.3 (Beta)
    1. Step 1 - Select a piece of background noise in your audio
    2. Step 2 - Noisereduction
  4. Noisecleaning with the free Adobe Soundbooth (Beta)
    1. 1. Select a piece of noise in your audio
    2. 2. Noisereduction
  5. Noisecleaning with Goldwave
    1. 1. Select a piece of noise in your audio
    2. 2. Noise reduction
    3. 3. Killing remaining noises with a Compressor/Expander
  6. Noisecleaning with Apple's GarageBand

Noisecleaning

Golden Rule: Allways do noisecleaning with headphones!

Silver Rule: Rather leave some noise in your recording, than to garble it with over-cleaning and ringing artifacts.

http://www.moebius.mynetcologne.de/librivox/goldwave-NC-before-and-after.gif

Here is a funny collection of noises found in librivox recordings. Of course any noisereduction software would have to fail on monster noises such as these and result in the well known whirling and ringing and Darth Vader like voices. But in the vast majority of librivox recordings a noisereduction could be done with minimal to none artifacts and with great effect to the overall listening pleasure. Find samples below. And it is free. And not much work.


Noisecleaning with the free Audacity 1.3.3 (Beta)

(If you would like to see a tutorial with pictures, please go here.)

(For a very detailed explanation of the sliders and their effects, go here.)

Audacity is the audio recorder and editor of choice for most Librivox volunteers. It's free and very good considering that it is free. Until now (May 2007) Audacity's capabilities to noiseclean a recording wasn't satisfactory and nobody used it. This changed! The new version has a revamped noiseclean effect - it's free - and its damn good. Please use it.

Audacity 1.3.3 beta - Download

Listen to four noisecleanings done with audacity
As for any noisecleaning software: The harder the noise the more difficult it is to noiseclean it without drawbacks. Audacity copes well. And it's free!

Note: If your noise-pattern changes over time of the complete recording (which is the worst case scenario), you'll have to split the noise reduction task into several goes. First third, middle, last third...or something. Each time sampling a piece of noise from that part and then selecting only that part to apply the noisereduction to.

Step 1 - Select a piece of background noise in your audio

Step 2 - Noisereduction


Noisecleaning with the free Adobe Soundbooth (Beta)

I learned from Durin Gleaves of Adobe that the "Soundbooth beta will remain active into August, but will expire at that time."

Note: If your noise-pattern changes over time of the complete recording (which is the worst case scenario), you'll have to split the noise reduction task into several goes. First third, middle, last third...or something. Each time sampling a piece of noise from that part and then selecting only that part to apply the noisereduction to.

Adobe Soundbooth is part of the brand new Adobe Creative Suite 3 (as of May2007). Adobe, on their own website, handed out a soundbooth beta version for free. That's a 200$ product you can use for free. All the functions you need for Librivox are working - With ONE exception - It only handles wav files and no mp3 files. For Windows and Mac (Intel Macs only). System requirements: http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/soundbooth/#sysreqs If you don't like to register at Adobe you can also download it from here.

Soundbooth's handling is very "visual" and "what you see is what you get" oriented. Soundbooth features an astonishing noisereduction filter which cannot be imagined any easier to use but yields great results. Soundbooth also features a priceless spectral waveform display, which comes in very handy if you get a little deeper into audio restauration.

Here is a Before:After sample (also used the soundbooth equalizer)

1. Select a piece of noise in your audio

2. Noisereduction


Noisecleaning with Goldwave

Goldwave is a wonderfully fast allround soundeditor for all your audio needs - BUT - it is not free, yet very cheap for what it can do. The Adobe Soundbooth Beta above is free and superior to Goldwave in noisecleaning. Goldwave can do more though than Soundbooth if you need it.

Here is a Before:After sample

Note: If your noise-pattern changes over time of the complete recording (which is the worst case scenario), you'll have to split the noise reduction task into several goes. First third, middle, last third...or something. Each time sampling a piece of noise from that part and then selecting only that part to apply the noisereduction to.

1. Select a piece of noise in your audio

Use the left and right mouse button to mark start and end of a selection with PURE(!) noise in it. No mouseclicks in it. No inhaling in it. No car comming up the driveway...pure dead air. Copy this to Clipboard with CRTL-C.

Now press CTRL-A to select all of your recording.

2. Noise reduction

3. Killing remaining noises with a Compressor/Expander

We want remaining low volume sounds to be removed in between pauses.


Noisecleaning with Apple's GarageBand

Details forthcoming

Similar techniques can be used in Audacity, within Audacity's limitations, if the Apple FX is available.

NoiseCleaning (last edited 2009-05-22 19:18:51 by ChristopherBooth)