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Post by Quoincidence on Sept 16, 2019 15:55:31 GMT
per had another look into demixing today. They used the 3 track master reel which was; Track 1; Vocals Track 2; Guitars Track 3; Bass, Drums and Crowd They also used master tapes from studio versions of the tracks they performed to get the eq wave lengths and separate those from other things. Crowd was separated onto it's own track, as was the bass and the drums, all still had a bit of over spill from the crowd noise in there. So really, you do still need master reels for it to be possible. Theres an interesting MatLab2017 expo video on it. Cheers
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frozenhero
Administrator
Drop-D beautiful
Posts: 1,420
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Post by frozenhero on Sept 16, 2019 22:07:36 GMT
And the more complex a mix gets, the less useful information you can derive from a finished 2-track master. You can't unbake a cake after all!
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per
Wild Horse
Posts: 62
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Post by per on Sept 18, 2019 6:19:28 GMT
per had another look into demixing today. They used the 3 track master reel which was; Track 1; Vocals Track 2; Guitars Track 3; Bass, Drums and Crowd They also used master tapes from studio versions of the tracks they performed to get the eq wave lengths and separate those from other things. Crowd was separated onto it's own track, as was the bass and the drums, all still had a bit of over spill from the crowd noise in there. So really, you do still need master reels for it to be possible. Theres an interesting MatLab2017 expo video on it. Cheers Aha! Ok, thanks for explaining this, I guess I missunderstood a bit when I first heard about the technique and got a bit too excited👍🏻
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