Please help me fix my audio recording that has the volume too high...
September 20, 2010 6:32 AM Subscribe
I have a Zoom portable digital audio recorder. I recorded a live band, but the volume level was too high, and now it sounds muffled. Is there anything i can do to fix it?
It's a Zoom H2 portable digital recorder... found here;
http://www.samash.com/p/H2%20Portable%20Digital%20Recorder%20Warehouse%20Resealed_571104
I recorded a live band in 360 mp3... but i didn't use the automatic 'limiter'... and when i went to 'crop' the performance in garage band, i can see it's off the top... and it sounds terribly muffled.
i'm wondering is there anything i can do to fix this? Perhaps something in garage band or something 'built into' my new mac book pro? or is there some software product i can use to correct this?
It's a Zoom H2 portable digital recorder... found here;
http://www.samash.com/p/H2%20Portable%20Digital%20Recorder%20Warehouse%20Resealed_571104
I recorded a live band in 360 mp3... but i didn't use the automatic 'limiter'... and when i went to 'crop' the performance in garage band, i can see it's off the top... and it sounds terribly muffled.
i'm wondering is there anything i can do to fix this? Perhaps something in garage band or something 'built into' my new mac book pro? or is there some software product i can use to correct this?
Doubtful. Clipped peak restoration software does exist (I don't know about garage band specifically) but it's not magic. I've got ok results from it on a slightly clipped sample which then gets submerged into a tune full of other stuff, but I wouldn't expect it to rescue a "terribly" clipped full band recording.
posted by Slyfen at 6:40 AM on September 20, 2010
posted by Slyfen at 6:40 AM on September 20, 2010
Sorry, the others are right. The audio information simply isn't there. Take it as a learning experience and move on. If it was a particularly special performance, you could try forums related to the band in question to see if someone else managed to do a live recording.
posted by Magnakai at 6:44 AM on September 20, 2010
posted by Magnakai at 6:44 AM on September 20, 2010
Best answer: Echoing the above, but with a useful pointer for future reference: setting your device to record in 24bit get's you enough extra headroom that you can set your recording levels to Peak at -12dB without noticeable noise at the low end, leaving plenty of room for any unexpected loudness.
Also lot's of good advice & tips to be gleaned from the community at the taperssection.com forums.
posted by dirm at 9:45 AM on September 20, 2010
Also lot's of good advice & tips to be gleaned from the community at the taperssection.com forums.
posted by dirm at 9:45 AM on September 20, 2010
Best answer: The problem with digital audio is that when it gets clipped...it's pretty much 'flattened' and gone. Feel free to send me a sample and I'll see if I have something in my toolbox.
posted by filmgeek at 10:29 AM on September 20, 2010
posted by filmgeek at 10:29 AM on September 20, 2010
Response by poster: lots of great advice....thanks everyone!!!!
posted by foodybat at 2:32 PM on September 20, 2010
posted by foodybat at 2:32 PM on September 20, 2010
This thread is closed to new comments.
If the signal clipped - its gone.
posted by mary8nne at 6:39 AM on September 20, 2010