Since we're on the topic of Beatles, is it possible to extract more than 1 backing vocal using this software? I know there are a lot of classic Beatles songs like Nowhere Man and Because with beautiful 3 part harmonies and it'd be great to hear just John, just Paul, and just George instead of John and not John.
Hi Gary, thanks for your videos explaining this new program. I have now installed it on my computer but I've encountered a couple of problems. Firstly I should say that I am processing operatic type voices from 1950s mono recordings and that could be my issue. Problem number 1: Vocal bleed into the Residual stem occasionally, number 2. I get a high pitched "squeak" every 12 seconds or so throughout the recording. This noise is not on the original mono tracks. Any suggestions please? I use Audacity to remix the various stems into Digitally Extracted Stereo.
Really? It’s taking a master and enhancing it isn’t it? Although it’s technically remixing also I suppose (even though people think of mashups when they hear the word remix)
@@TheBeatlesTracks Audioshake, MVSEP, and Lalal are the the three very very best. Audioshake is pricy, but the audio stems sound by far the best, not always the most complete, but the best sound. If it's important track, I use those three and stitch the stems together. MVSEP is the 2nd best, also, MVSEP has audience stem separation. Lalal is great because it has stem extraction for wind instruments, and strings, etc, so i can get a cello track off an old Nirvana track. That being said, I still wish I had DeMix Pro5, it seems cool.
@@CoolhandLukeSkywalkr I’ll try out audioshake, thanks for the suggestion! I’ve done a few remixes but not sure how to upload to UA-cam, but these demix softwares are getting pretty fukin crazy
@@TheBeatlesTracks audioshake is ten dollars per stem, very expensive. Keep in mind mvsep is free. But on sound quality alone, audioshake is by far the best. However, audioshake also doesn't create the most complete stems. Mvsep creates very complete stems. Gaudio studio also gives nice free stems if you can get it to work.
Great video!! DeMix Pro 5 is absolutely at the top of this source extraction software!!
Since we're on the topic of Beatles, is it possible to extract more than 1 backing vocal using this software?
I know there are a lot of classic Beatles songs like Nowhere Man and Because with beautiful 3 part harmonies and it'd be great to hear just John, just Paul, and just George instead of John and not John.
Hi Gary, thanks for your videos explaining this new program. I have now installed it on my computer but I've encountered a couple of problems. Firstly I should say that I am processing operatic type voices from 1950s mono recordings and that could be my issue. Problem number 1: Vocal bleed into the Residual stem occasionally, number 2. I get a high pitched "squeak" every 12 seconds or so throughout the recording. This noise is not on the original mono tracks. Any suggestions please? I use Audacity to remix the various stems into Digitally Extracted Stereo.
"Remastering" isn't the correct term for what you're doing.
Really? It’s taking a master and enhancing it isn’t it? Although it’s technically remixing also I suppose (even though people think of mashups when they hear the word remix)
There are better seperators in better price
Do you think for exemple at Ultimate Vocal Remover ?
Like what
@@TheBeatlesTracks Audioshake, MVSEP, and Lalal are the the three very very best. Audioshake is pricy, but the audio stems sound by far the best, not always the most complete, but the best sound. If it's important track, I use those three and stitch the stems together. MVSEP is the 2nd best, also, MVSEP has audience stem separation. Lalal is great because it has stem extraction for wind instruments, and strings, etc, so i can get a cello track off an old Nirvana track. That being said, I still wish I had DeMix Pro5, it seems cool.
@@CoolhandLukeSkywalkr I’ll try out audioshake, thanks for the suggestion! I’ve done a few remixes but not sure how to upload to UA-cam, but these demix softwares are getting pretty fukin crazy
@@TheBeatlesTracks audioshake is ten dollars per stem, very expensive. Keep in mind mvsep is free. But on sound quality alone, audioshake is by far the best. However, audioshake also doesn't create the most complete stems. Mvsep creates very complete stems. Gaudio studio also gives nice free stems if you can get it to work.