Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy › Audio Quality fixes???? help
-
Audio Quality fixes???? help
Posted by Delano Bryant on December 8, 2006 at 11:23 pmI just finished editing a hunting video for VS. I want to sweeten the audio that was shot in the field. As usual audio was third nature to the crew. So I have tons of wind noise and the voices don’t sound crisp and clear. I just exported the sequence to Soundtrack Pro.
Any advice? and What filters do you usually use to sweeten audio?
Thanks
Marcus Carlton replied 16 years, 9 months ago 5 Members · 12 Replies -
12 Replies
-
David Roth weiss
December 8, 2006 at 11:27 pmSTP has a pretty good noise reduction. The STP tutorial that comes with FCP Studio tells you how to use it properly.
DRW
-
Michael Gissing
December 9, 2006 at 2:32 am>>Any advice? and What filters do you usually use to sweeten audio?
No. If you have so little regard for getting usable sound on location then I have no advice at all. “sweeten”ing audio is like polishing a turd. No matter what you do it is still a turd.
-
Bob Cole
December 9, 2006 at 3:00 am[Michael G] “No matter what you do it is still a turd.”
In principle I agree. But in practice, you can get away with a lot nowadays. You might be surprised at the before-and-after of a dialog track that was in here last week.
A very astute sound mixer friend was able to make this problematic track (recorded too close to a very noisy HVAC system) sound really really good, using only STP. The key was to use each filter just a little bit. In this case, a little bit of low-end roll-off; a little compression of voice only; for some parts, a little normalization; a little more compression of the mix; and a little limiting. It sounded really great in the end! And these were non-professional voices.
Of course I agree with you about trying to do the best you can on location. The tracks would have been a lot better if recorded on a sound stage. But sometimes, you just have to roll with what you have, and thank your lucky stars there are tools that can “fix it in post.”
— Bob C
-
Bob Cole
December 9, 2006 at 3:01 amI forgot — we started the fix with low end roll off, then noise reduction, then the rest as I described.
Experiment! And use very good speakers, or else headphones.
— Bob C.
-
David Roth weiss
December 9, 2006 at 3:02 amJeeze Michael, that’s really helpful and certain make his job a whole lot easier. I think somebody got up on the wrong side of their bed today.
-
Delano Bryant
December 9, 2006 at 3:33 amyeah well “us” editors get stuck polishing that turd. And you should know that by now. What is done in the field is out of our hands.
-
Delano Bryant
December 9, 2006 at 3:36 amThank you Bob, btw. after making the changes in STP, I just save as the sequence and it automatically saves it in the FCP folder correct? or do I need to re-export it TOO FCP?
-
Delano Bryant
December 9, 2006 at 3:39 amDavid, when I finish correcting the audio. Do I save as MIX or what for it to automatically update back in FCP? Its been awhile since I’ve used STP I forgot moving files back to FCP.
-
Bob Cole
December 9, 2006 at 4:47 amI’ve had a lot of trouble with the round-tripping between FCP and STP. I’ve resorted to exporting as a new QT file, saving the results of the STP session as a copy, and reimporting the file into FCP. I know that the way it’s supposed to be, but I’ve had so many FCP crashes with STP round-tripping that I gave up.
Reply to this Discussion! Login or Sign Up