1. Click "Split Stereo Track" on the drop down menu to the left of the track.
2. Use the same menu on each track and select "Mono"
[By this point there should be 2 different tracks that are in mono]
3. Select ONE of the tracks and use the "Invert" effect.
It should eliminate the center (or vocal) frequencies. Bleed-through of vocals only means that they were recorded w/ echo or reverb effects that cannot be removed.
How did you manage to get it perfect like that? I get a lot of noise when I try to remove the vocals using programs like Goldwave or Audacity.
VeridelHibiki 2 years ago
I used Audacity as well. Which effects have you used?
kaneekee2000 2 years ago
Mostly I only used Remove Vocals because, as much as I experimented with other effects, I couldn't find one that removed the noise.
VeridelHibiki 2 years ago
Ok lol if you can, follow this step by step:
1. Click "Split Stereo Track" on the drop down menu to the left of the track.
2. Use the same menu on each track and select "Mono"
[By this point there should be 2 different tracks that are in mono]
3. Select ONE of the tracks and use the "Invert" effect.
It should eliminate the center (or vocal) frequencies. Bleed-through of vocals only means that they were recorded w/ echo or reverb effects that cannot be removed.
kaneekee2000 2 years ago
can you send it to me??
FancyLoveFancy 2 years ago
Me too. I love it too. Thanks for sharing. André :-)
BaerchenprinzBln 2 years ago
love it
pogo506 2 years ago