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7

In general, the short answer is simply 'no'. Cutting out an instrument entirely in the mastering stage of a recording, is completely impossible. Even if you are having balancing problems that are not due to frequency ranges in your listening equipment, it is hard to believe that the balance was good when you were actually mixing it down. This is a problem ...


7

Actually recording it twice produces a "chorus" effect. Think of the vocals in your average Queen song; Freddie Mercury would often sing the same thing multiple times with the same approximate timing and pitch, but due to natural imperfections it sounds almost as if he's singing with someone else. Simply doubling the same track won't do this, even if you ...


5

There are many reasons to double guitars in a recording, but the main one, in my opinion is because you want to pan the two tracks on the side during mix. Guitars have frequencies that typically compete with the voice tracks, which you want to keep in the middle. Now, simply doubling a track won't cut it, because there is no way you can move the two tracks ...


3

Most pro video editors will let you strip the audio track off once you put the entire movie in the timeline. Once you have removed the original audio track you can add your French version. The first issue will be, how do you know where your new track and movie line up? Do both have sync marks? Are you absolutely certain that both the video and new audio ...


3

You've found all the big modern trackers. There isn't nearly as much development as there used to be, mostly because it's now almost trivial to compress and distribute a traditional waveform recording using lossy codecs like MP3 or AAC. Tracker music in wavetable modules like the ones libmodplug can read are mostly just for enthusiasts now. If you don't ...


3

You cannot solve for x and y in the equation: x + y = 5 because you do not have enough information. If you knew what x was, you could find y, and you can find what x and y are in relation to each other (e.g. x=5-y), but you cannot find both values without more info. Likewise, once two signals are mixed, you cannot find what either sounds like by itself ...


3

If you literally duplicate it in your DAW, then you have a sample-for-sample copy of the original track. Unless you change one of the recordings somehow, it won't make the resultant sound beefier so much as it will make it twice the volume. Re-recording it causes a different-enough sound that it allows things to be "thicker" because even though it is one ...


2

A couple of things with doubling up recording a guitar track; you can for the first recording, dial one tone into the amp and for the second recording dial in a different tone and play the same track again, effectively mimicking two guitar tones(guitarists) playing together; you could then double each of these up and push one of each to each speaker. As ...


1

Get Adobe Premier Pro. Grab the original video with the one language you have to the editing box. Right-click the video and click UNLINK. Now your video and your audio is already unlinked from each other. Click the Audio Box where the Original Audio was and delete it. Now Grab the French movie to another Box of the timeline. Right Click the French Version ...



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