![]() |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh well so far the composer does not have the bass sax or the electric viols. He says he may be able to make acoustic viols sound electric with effects though. I think the only one he didn't have was the bass sax so far, but one of the example tracks had sounds I want, which I find out were orchestral chimes, and I am not sure if he has that or not. I can ask. But I can have him put that on hold until the movie is done though. He also has a bass flute the samples were not played in types of sounds that I was looking for in the example tracks, but you said before if we can just get our hands on the bass flute, to just blow into it and make them sounds ourselves.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Quote:
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
I give up Ryan. I'm not sure if you don't understand or are deliberately obtuse. I play the sax, and have flute and clarinet here too. The idea of you blowing into a bass flute is really funny. You actually expect to produce notes, even if you can actually find somebody daft enough to lend it to you? Playing a bass flute is a possibility for a flautist, but probably a bit optimistic for you.
You crack on - you and the composer do seem rather on top of it. I'm sure between the two of you you will certainly produce something, er, quite special and unique. PS, orchestral chimes are probably better known as Tubular Bells - remember Mike Oldfield? In my sample libraries, I have loads of tubular bells, but no orchestral chimes. Best of luck with the music - I give up. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh well it was said before on here, to just blow into the flute myself, unless that was incorrect and should not do it. The composer can just use samples then if that's best. I will ask him. But let's say I save all the music for post and the picture is locked. Should I then put the example tracks in the movie, if getting opinions from an audience on the example tracks does not work, because the audience does not know enough about it, like it was said before, then what do you do then? How does a filmmaker get opinions on what music works for a scene and what not befor asking the composer to do that type of music and feel?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Quote:
Quote:
Unrelated, I got a relatively simple audio recording project and I've been trying to educate myself on using multi-track audio programs. I'm currently making my way through Reaper. I can't believe I've been using Audacity all this time. I only do basic edits but still I had no idea how much better these other programs were. I also purchased a MixPre 6 but now I wish I got the 10 instead. As soon as you start recording musicians you need lots of tracks. It should be fine because I don't anticipate becoming an audio engineer. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
My forehead is sore from the wall banging.
Once you get a proper DAW, some of the things they can do really make life much better. Years ago it was always X vs Y vs Z and everyone disagreed, but now, they're all remarkably good, just different, so Reaper Logic, Cubase and the others really are all good - just different. Cubase for years has had decent MIDI editing, and now that familiar screen we all used in the 90s doesn't really look much different, and the basic operation is the same, but now it can show you real audio and let you fix faults. I've got the latest version of Cubase and it has a plug in - well, a link to a separate piece of software called spectral layers, and I was so impressed I bought the full version. You can remove reverb - something totally impossible only a few years back, but you can also take a commercial recording and it splits out stems - so vocals, bass, drums, keys, guitars etc - each one as a separate track. It can fix all kinds of noise - and I've not scratched the surface. As I use Adobe, I still do little audio edits from Premiere by using Audition, but Cubase and Sound Forge are my usual tools. Spectral tools doesn't have a preset for fixing bass flutes though. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
You can remove reverb now in audio? Wow! Is their much quality loss if you do?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Yes and sometimes yes. Izotrope can do it, and there are several other programs.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
You need to listen and hear if it works in a particular situation, However, these things are usually best avoided, unless there's no escape.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh okay thanks, if this is only a few years old now, no one in the filmmaking community has been talking about it that I caught wind of. It's mostly the locations that have some reverb, but I can live with it, as long as audiences are not bothered by it.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Split out separate stems from a mixed track? That's hard for me to envision ... it sounds like the nonsense on the CSI genre of TV shows. (Of course ten years ago I'd have said you can't remove wow and flutter automatically. And fifty years ago CEDAR hadn't been conceived.) Paul, is Spectral Layers a standalone program, or does it work only under Cubase? I don't need all the editing facilities but I certainly would like to clean up some audio, especially older recordings.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
To my shame I’d never heard of it, and it appeared in Cubase 11 pro. I tried it and it removed the vocal from a track I’d tried to do myself and failed and it worked. It also retained the stereo field which others usually destroy. It also left me the removed vocal as a stem. I did a bit of Googling and discovered it’s a separate product Strienberg sell. So I bought the full version. It’s does so much I’ve only scratched the surface.
If you have a mix where say, the vocal has too much reverb, you can extract the vocal, dereverb it, then put it back. You can also adjust the stem balance. If you listen to the stems there are artefacts. But as they are just unwanted bits of other tracks, when you remix, they stop being artefacts and sit back where they should. EDIT I've a track I'll share for scrutiny - it was recorded before covid struck. The backing harmonies and the music were sorted, but vocal wise, all we had was the guide vocal Ellie sang in one take, and she didn't even know the song very well - so it was a kind of rough run-through so the BVs could be sorted. In some places she even sang the wrong notes - AND - she sang with the studio monitors like a PA - never intended to be used. With covid the project died. I thought I'd try Spectral Layers to clean her track up, and then see if it was clean enough to fix the wrong notes. It's quite exposed at the start, so now you know how it was recorded, you might be able to hear the artefacts. I think they're pretty low. I'd welcome comments. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
They can extract a vocal from a mix? Insane.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Not just vocals, but vocals, drums, bass, keys and 'others'.
Here's the unmix feature |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Im afraid I cant watch that cause my brain just exploded
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Wow that’s amazing
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
That's what I thought - with cubase, I got the elements one, or most of it for free and I decided the range of stuff it can do was really impressive. The noise fingerprint looks useful, even though I haven't used it yet - but the thing I have used is where you take a mix from years back - extract the stems and then you can re-balance it. My recordings from the 90s, as I'm a bass player historically, were always a bit bass heavy - and you can split the recording, then lower the bass, but leaving the piano left hand - really neat! Oddly - Steinberg's videos are pointed at modern EDM dance music creators, leaving the old fogeys like me to work out which bits would work for us. It's clever enough to hear the difference between piano and electric piano. Just a few years ago we told people reverb was permanent, and likened it to removing one ingredient from a finished cake - it couldn't be done, and now we can.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Ryan - watch this video to the end, and tell me that this would not be exactly what your composer should have in his machine. 25Gb later - it's mine.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
I watched it. Thanks for that. So yes, my composer does seem to have that type of machine from what I can tell. Why?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Good - because note how that guy way writing music using that one new package, and kept talking about how important it was to watch the visuals. Note how the exact instrument was not important at all, but what was, was how it was played. That bit of software takes samples of real instruments blends them together into the kind of stuff you need, and that single package is less than two hundred dollars, once you've got the player on your computer. Going through the combination patches - some have low flutes in the blend - but the point here is the combination of the sounds. Can you perhaps see better why picking a single sound as a foundation may be the wrong approach, for professional, quality audio for your movie?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh yes, I know what you mean. What I did was, I would show the composer sounds I wanted, and he would tell me what instruments those were so we could keep track of how to get those sounds. For example one sound I showed him he said was a base trombone, and a tenor trombone being played simultaneously. Or another sound I wanted he said was a cello and a viola being played simultaneously. So he just made a note of what instruments in order to get that combination sound. But I know what you mean, about the sounds being played a certain way. I would show the composer the sounds I wanted and then he would make notes of what instruments they were, for reference.
But it seems that he cannot get the sounds from some movies, even if he has the same instruments. For example, one of the example tracks I told him I thought would be good, the instrument on it was a celeste he said, but the celeste samples he tried out, just didn't sound the same as in the movie, and gave off a very different feel, even though it was the same instrument. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Quote:
Ryan, many people here are trying to help you, and are giving you a lot of advice. After each suggestion is posted, you reply in essence, "Yes, but here's what I did and what happened." The people here are already aware that the process is frustrating and the results are unsatisfactory to you; they are trying to give you other options. Yet you seem to keep doing things your own way. It seems you don't much want to take advice; then why are you asking for it? And why do you keep defending the way you've done things up 'til now? Do you think you will eventually convince people here that they are wrong and you are right? |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Sorry I don't mean to not take advice. I appreciate the advice. It's just when people tell me to let the composer have free reign and work behind my back, and then expect good results, this didn't happen in the past. On my past projects, I was told the music was not good. On here I was told this as well.
So I feel if I do the same thing again, I will have the same results. It's just risky. So when the advice is telling me to be risky, I am weary of it going wrong again, since it did in the past, that's all. I am just trying to figure out the reason, why take the same risk again, and to expect a different result. That's just the part I do not understand in the advice. So I thought if I made sure the music was more like more professional tracks in more professional movies, than that is probably better than leaving it up to chance and the unknown. I just don't understand what the benefit of taking the same risks are, and no one has commented on what to do if the same results yield, if I do the same thing again. But it just seems the advice is too take the same risk again and that will be better. That's the part I just don't understand. So it's not that I don't mean to take the advice, I just want to understand why I am doing it, especially when it has not worked for me before. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Quote:
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Well I was told to just describe what I want in words to the composer, the feeling I want, and to leave them to it. Doesn't that mean free reign on what to do, after I tell them what I want? However, if I have misinterpreted the advice in anyway, then I apologize. I am greatful for the advice. I have followed some of it so far for sure.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Can we hear what music you have had before, that people have told you was the good. There is always the possibility you have taken advice wrongly, and misunderstood, like you do here all the time. Your current insistence that composing must be a ‘we’ process, a collaboration, rather than your composers own work, is going to spoil it. Consider your credits. Music by Fred smith or music by Fred smith and ryan Wray?
However the more we go on and on, I wonder about your composer, because he is starting to sound like a pianist who composes the old fashioned way, and is not at all comfy with technology. Both of you talk about instruments as if they are the main feature. This Celeste rubbish for example. Orchestral Celestes are one of the instruments that, like harps, do NOT sound like people think they do. They’re a family of instrument, and as reformists discover, each is unique, but for movie music, they end up treated, and enhanced to make them the bell like pure tone that everyone ‘thinks’ celestes sound like. This is what Greg is talking about. In a cathedral, they sound wonderful because of the building. The Celeste usually sounds pretty horrid in somebodies house, or in the studio. If you have a synth Celeste sound, that is not remotely what they sound like. Your composer seems very green on substitution. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh when you say the music before that people told me was good, do you mean the tracks I chose for this one, or music from past projects that is good?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
I mean the people who told you the music was bad - before you do anything, perhaps we should investigate of they were correct? If they didn't like the music they could be correct and there is a problem, or they could simply have been wrong?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Sure. Here is one where I was told so, or it was not bad, but just generic perhaps.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Well - my view is that it's often far, far too loud, which makes it stand out, but some is missing. The scene of the bad guys with the bats going up the stairs - where is the tension building music, but then at the end scene we get quite epic, but detached music. It's not in my view appropriate - it's the sort of thing you'd use to be patriotic or proud or triumphant, it's too nice for the action. There's also silence at the end.
None is bad music, but levels are extreme, and while most fits the mood, that end scene is spoiled by the music, not enhanced. Not what the average listener/viewer would expect. Sometimes you can do it with mismatched music for effect - Pearl Harbour, and other war movies often have very contrasting music - to make the images detached. The suspense building music on the stairs is a cliche of movie music, and works well - so odd you didn't use it. I'm surprised your comments said the music was bad. Maybe you just didn't polish it properly but much is fine, bar the weird style at the end. Your audio needs work - all the cuts in the edit in the office have very obviously edited sound - the background noise changes quite clearly on the cuts. some are severe and even with the music blasting away can still be heard. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh okay thanks. I had an audio mixer do the audio editing and mixing. Perhaps I could get someone else next time for it then.
As for the music, I too felt it was too positive sounding at the end and felt it didn't fit. However, the choice to have no music as they went up the stairs was my choice though, because I wanted to emphasize how quiet they were trying to be, to not be heard. Is that bad, to not have music during a scene where characters are trying to not make sound? But I also felt that the music was too positive, before I got other people's comments on it. So that is why I thought perhaps I should have more of an active roll in the music process with the composer for future projects, rather than just leave them to it, and take whatever they give me, whatever that may be. Wouldn't that be a logical way to go, based on past experience? |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
You keep asking if things are bad, they're only bad if they don't work. A number of films have very little music, only sound effects.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Oh okay, but I thought that the music in that short film example of mine, that the music didn't work though. But as far as choosing to have no music in some scenes, well Paul thought it was a strange to have no music in the one section, so would others think so then?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Sorry I don't mean to twist people's words. Behind the back was my term, but what I meant was, I would have them do what they do without checking up on it at all, if that is what the advice was.
I could describe what I want to the composer, it's just that when I did before, I would end up getting something back that was very different from what I was thinking. So I feel I have to be much more specific in my descriptions therefore, so I do not get something back that is too different and at the risk that it will not work as well. |
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Right, so you are saying what you want is creative people, but they can only be creative with your input?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
That happens to many directors because they're dealing with something that they can't completely control. It may be the reason why only a small number of composers get to do major feature films.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Well I just want to be a part of the creativity more so and offer some of what I would like. That way, I know what's going on, rather than be surprised later if I do not make myself a part of the process. What I could do is show the composer example tracks of I want and then they can give me samples of what they come up with and I pick the best sample, for him to make the rest out of... But that's just an idea. I just don't want the music to be out of place or not work like before and not sure how else to do it, without having more specific requests.
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
So you want them to create the music, then when you don't like it, start again with another then another? So you want them to do three times the work for one fee? get real Ryan. You talk about doing it like the pros - then come up with this. What you are missing is trust. You find a composer with ideas, then you let them run. If you really want appropriate music you need to give them the finished edit, or at least a time locked one, then they can do their best work. If you withhold this, or get them to do the work only, then constant revisions make it tiresome to do - and your input will drive them mad. Creative people respond very badly to less creative people interfering. Why engage somebody then remove their autonomy? Frankly - in the movie, events, theatre and entertainment business - every single department tends to work on it's own - with guidance but whenever a Director oversteps the mark and over-directs, the product suffers. Let the people do their job. You're worrying about specific instruments, when clearly your input would have been better placed sorting the sound so it's less distracting, and if you couldn't notice the dialogue vanishing behind the music, then maybe your judgement in audio matters needs to adjustment. If you get your bass flute, who decides how loud the music is?
|
Re: Is it possible to make instruments sound natural through audio editing like this?
Well this is why I wanted to give the composer very specific ideas and specific example tracks and sounds from the tracks. That way, the music I feel could turn out better in a much shorter amount of time. But it was said before that that's micromanaging. So I am not sure where to draw the line between being specific in example tracks and sounds, vs. trusting them to come up with something that fits, without knowing what they will actually come up with.
As for who decides how loud the music is, that would be up to the audio mixer, not the composer, wouldn't it be? |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:10 AM. |
DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2025 The Digital Video Information Network