Thanks, this was really helpful, especially with the example/settings. One thing I need to get in the habit of is letting a few extra seconds to record background noise to more easily get that noise profile. My main culprit is my laptop fan
Hello! I have a specific question. When i record my first podcast there was noises in the background and i tried to remove it with effect - noise reduction. The first setting for dB to not hear it i tap 17, but the volume is quiet, it mutes my volume quite a bit and I don't know how to remove the noise without reducing my volume so much.
Hey there! So first thing I would make sure is that the noise in your background is fairly consistent throughout the recording. Consistent sounds like buzzes and fans are easy to clean up. Make sure that you are gathering that noise sample first as that will be what the noise reduction effect is targeting. If your own voice is being reduced in volume, it could be that that noise profile wasn't chosen or that the noise might be too much for the effect. You also might want to give using a Noise Gate a try if the noise reduction effect doesn't work. This will basically clamp down on noise when you aren't speaking and "let in" your voice when it breaches a certain noise level threshold. It's under effect, noise reduction/restoration, noise gate. You can find out what the noise level is using the Analyze Noise Level function. Set the threshold to the level of your noise and then experiment with the attack, hold, and decay. Check out more about the effect in audacity here- manual.audacityteam.org/man/noise_gate.html
Hi I applied pink noise to my audio clip. I don't want to remove the effect completely but reduce the sound of the noise to hear the audio of my clip well, what can I do? How can I adjust the volumes of the applied noise? Thank you
Hey there! I'm assuming that your vocal track is on one track and the pink noise is on another? If so, there are a couple options for integrating that noise into your vocal track. Outside of a larger volume adjustment of the whole track,( maybe keep the noise level around -15db and voice level to -3db), you could use something like the different EQ effects to assist in integrating the audio. The graphic eq/eq filter will basically give you the frequency bands of the noise. Think of these effects as a more surgical way of reducing the volume of the noise. I'd probably add a high shelf to the high frequencies of the noise around 1k and lower it so that your voice will pop more in the higher tones. You could also cut the frequencies of the noise around the mid tones (300-800hz) as a lot of the presence of your voice is around that point.
Thanks, this was really helpful, especially with the example/settings. One thing I need to get in the habit of is letting a few extra seconds to record background noise to more easily get that noise profile. My main culprit is my laptop fan
That laptop fan.... we feel you
Thanks. Super simple now I know. Who would have guessed I had to call up the tool twice.
Thanks man! This really helped! Appreciate it.
Thank you so much, so many guides, so much bs, but you got right to it ty
That's what we're aiming for!
Equaliser setting for Voice Over in Audacity?
Thanks Brian great tips for a novice like me :)
Thanks for watching!
Hello! I have a specific question. When i record my first podcast there was noises in the background and i tried to remove it with effect - noise reduction. The first setting for dB to not hear it i tap 17, but the volume is quiet, it mutes my volume quite a bit and I don't know how to remove the noise without reducing my volume so much.
Hey there! So first thing I would make sure is that the noise in your background is fairly consistent throughout the recording. Consistent sounds like buzzes and fans are easy to clean up. Make sure that you are gathering that noise sample first as that will be what the noise reduction effect is targeting. If your own voice is being reduced in volume, it could be that that noise profile wasn't chosen or that the noise might be too much for the effect. You also might want to give using a Noise Gate a try if the noise reduction effect doesn't work. This will basically clamp down on noise when you aren't speaking and "let in" your voice when it breaches a certain noise level threshold. It's under effect, noise reduction/restoration, noise gate. You can find out what the noise level is using the Analyze Noise Level function. Set the threshold to the level of your noise and then experiment with the attack, hold, and decay. Check out more about the effect in audacity here- manual.audacityteam.org/man/noise_gate.html
@@Libsyn Thank you for the answer! I really appreciate it! I will try the things you told me. ❤❤❤
Hi I applied pink noise to my audio clip. I don't want to remove the effect completely but reduce the sound of the noise to hear the audio of my clip well, what can I do? How can I adjust the volumes of the applied noise? Thank you
Hey there! I'm assuming that your vocal track is on one track and the pink noise is on another? If so, there are a couple options for integrating that noise into your vocal track. Outside of a larger volume adjustment of the whole track,( maybe keep the noise level around -15db and voice level to -3db), you could use something like the different EQ effects to assist in integrating the audio. The graphic eq/eq filter will basically give you the frequency bands of the noise. Think of these effects as a more surgical way of reducing the volume of the noise. I'd probably add a high shelf to the high frequencies of the noise around 1k and lower it so that your voice will pop more in the higher tones. You could also cut the frequencies of the noise around the mid tones (300-800hz) as a lot of the presence of your voice is around that point.
there is no difference useless to watch, bcz example is waste