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Posted

Hi, I have a track I am finishing off and the main instrument within it is my old Yamaha CP-30 which I recorded into an audio track however I recorded it a bit too "hot" and there are a few notes, not many - maybe 10 or 12- which are slightly distorted and I was wondering if there is anything in Cakewalk which I can use to edit them out without actually deleting the audio.

I would probably try and record it again, but I have since sold the CP-30.

Posted

There are actually more passages with a bit of clipping than I thought. I might just have to EQ them carefully and disguise it somehow.

Posted

Yeah, there are a variety of plug-ins that claim to be able to smooth out clipping with varying degrees of success. I finally snagged a license for iZotope RX Elements and it does the job as well as any.
The trip to Terry West's site is worth it just to check out the oddness of it all.

More about Terry on the Freeware FX thread....

Posted

The fact that you're concerned about this issue indicates you don't want to release your work with this amount of distortion on the CP-30. Nothing suggested so far in the thread will actually eliminate the distortion. I'd say it's time to fire up whatever synth you still have, play the part again, and consider this a lesson for the future.

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Posted

Thanks all for the tips. I will have a look at the various plug ins (I had forgotten about Audacity!!)

I'm reluctant to re-record as the original sound of the CP-30 i had going through a phaser effect sounds dreamy ?. But as you say I might have to bite the bullet and re-do with a midi piano plus effects.

Posted

You can remove short spots of digital and analog clipping.

What you can't do is take a constantly/heavily saturated recording (like distorted guitar) and remove it.

Samplitude Pro X Suite comes with declipping capabilities.

There's also Izotope Rx.

Posted
On ‎8‎/‎7‎/‎2019 at 2:42 AM, Jim Roseberry said:

You can remove short spots of digital and analog clipping.

What you can't do is take a constantly/heavily saturated recording (like distorted guitar) and remove it.

Samplitude Pro X Suite comes with declipping capabilities.

There's also Izotope Rx.

That's what I need Jim, thanks for the constructive response.

Posted

RX 7 can remove clipping. It may also be done with Spectral Layers 6 from Steinberg. As mentioned Samplitude Pro X4 also can.  

True one can not unbake a cake. However, we are not talking about baking. Sound has a frequency(s) with all its overtones. These can be isolated and edited.  

Who thought we could adjust the note pitch with ease via Melodyne of recorded sound. Anyone heard of autotune? 

 

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