[Rwp] Help with noise removal
TheOreoMonster
theoreomonster at reaperaccess.com
Tue May 24 14:55:02 EDT 2016
Actually when you make a selection in reaper split it into its own item (i believe Shift+S does this but don’t remember if thats a reaper default or one i assigned) then press F2 to go into items dialog and go to the effects button. You can add effect to your select the same way you do to a track there.
> On May 24, 2016, at 5:02 AM, Alan <alan.jdv at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Morning!
> Well, if excuse me, I didn"t know you are interested in podcasting. In fact, latest audacity releases include autoduck features for a classic scenario music track plus voice track. However, you are right, in some cases reaper could be a better option to move audio clips around,, cause its item and track structure feels more natural (at least for me). I usually apply effects from another audio editor, even noise reduction, and then I load all clips into reaper for a final cut. In my experience, it is the most productive procedure for podcasting purposes, cause Reaper is focused into music production and forces you to apply some advanced techniques (like envelope points and that) just to apply simple effects during a given time selection.
> Good luck!
>
> Enviado desde mi iPhone
>
>> El 24 may 2016, a las 0:59, TheOreoMonster <theoreomonster at reaperaccess.com> escribió:
>>
>> I’d have to agree for anything editing one or more audio tracks at a time Reaper will be better in the long run than Audacity unless their accessibility got a big bump. Reaper is a lot more flexible in its editing as well which means the learning curve can be a bit steeper but it will pay off in the end. I think in the case of the noise removal you probably just need some clarification around how to get to or do certain things from the keyboard, but as i mostly use reaper on OS X i am not really sure what in that plug in window is visible to your screen reader in windows.
>>> On May 23, 2016, at 6:30 PM, Nolan Darilek <nolan at thewordnerd.info> wrote:
>>>
>>> Thanks. My understanding, based on an albeit limited amount of research, was that Reaper was better than Audacity for editing podcasts and podcast-like audio. In particular, I like that it auto fades in and out audio around deletions, something that took up lots of time with Audacity. Also, it is claimed that ReaFIR's noise removal algorithm is better than that of Audacity. I'm also not sure if Audacity's accessibility has improved over the last few years, but the last time I attempted to use it I didn't get spoken feedback for such useful but basic features as selecting sections of audio on a track. I could select a track, but got no spoken feedback when attempting to remove a piece of audio to strike out a flubbed sentence.
>>>
>>>
>>> So, unless Audacity access has improved, or a plugin will auto-fade audio around deletion points, I think Audacity will be more painful to use than would Reaper. I did some research regarding using it for podcast production and it seemed like a workable and better Audacity alternative. Did I just not do enough research?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> On 05/23/2016 04:55 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>> Hi there:
>>>> In my opinion, perhaps you are not using the most useful tool for your needs. It is not related to your experience or skill level at all, but editing audio in reaper is like cooking a burger using a laser gun. it is doable, but, well, if audacity seems hard to handle for you, definitely reaper will be almost the same. Reaper"s philosofy is oriented for music production, I recomend you to take another look at audacity (it is a great software and prety accessible), goldwave, or soundforge, if you want to simply edit audio.
>>>> Talking about noise reduction, I never had success doing it in reaper, someone else could help you if possible; anyways, it is prety doable and easy in audacity, much easier, I am sure.
>>>>
>>>> Hope this helps!
>>>> Y
>>>>
>>>> Enviado desde mi iPhone
>>>>
>>>>> El 23 may 2016, a las 19:19, Nolan Darilek <nolan at thewordnerd.info> escribió:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hey all. New to Reaper and decided to give it a shot after fighting with Audacity for years and feeling like it makes my light audio editing a pain. I've been reading lots, and while there's plenty of information out there, it seems to be presented across several different sources and makes getting up and running challenging. So apologies if there are basic answers to my questions which I just haven't found.
>>>>>
>>>>> My setup is Reaper 5.20 with the Osara plugin running under NVDA. I have a track recorded on a somewhat noisy digital recorder, so my first task is removing noise.
>>>>>
>>>>> I've found this guide:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.homebrewaudio.com/reafir-madness-hidden-noise-reduction-tool-in-reaper/
>>>>>
>>>>> To make my task easier, I recorded about 30 seconds of ambient noise on my recorder before my voice begins. I set the loop start/end points, enabled repeat, ensured that the track contains only noise. Then I followed these instructions right up to the point where I'm told to close the effects window, which I can't seem to do. What I do is enable the Create Noise Profile checkbox and play my noise, but nothing I do ever gets it removed.
>>>>>
>>>>> Also, this article seems to imply that eventually you'll hear silence, because the noise filter will remove the noise from the repeated track. I never hear silence. Instead, I hear my noisy loop repeated again and again. Additionally, the Osara commands shift/control-shift-p claim there are no effects on the selected tracks. This leads me to believe that I'm just editing effect parameters, and there's some enable/persist step obvious in the UI but not apparent to accessibility. I think there's a bit in the performance settings dialog where it shows effect performance, but I never see the values climb above 0.
>>>>>
>>>>> What am I missing? Trying to be patient but this is enormously frustrating. I'm a software developer with lots of experience, and Reaper shouldn't be *this* confusing. :) Audio editing sure, but I can't even apply an effect.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks.
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