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| a question about asymetrical waveforms. please help [MUSIC] | |
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Analysis
Artist
Topics: 72 Replies: 6282
Registered: 16.Mar.03 |
WEll, that won't help. DC offset picks the average of the whole song and drops that into the middle. The points is, that the offset of the middle isn't equal during the entire song, so after the DC offset, there still is a small offset....
What whirloop said is better I guess.
But uhm, indeed, a screenshot would be nice
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AmBeam
Artist
Topics: 19 Replies: 577
Registered: 24.Oct.04 |
Analysis wrote on 26 Jun. (10:24) :
WEll, that won't help. DC offset picks the average of the whole song and drops that into the middle. The points is, that the offset of the middle isn't equal during the entire song, so after the DC offset, there still is a small offset....
What whirloop said is better I guess.
But uhm, indeed, a screenshot would be nice
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I was thinking about "before-rendering" mastering. On master channel etc, not after rendering. I'm using it and I don't have any problems with DC. Just check it and don't guess it's good or not
blurp |
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nilmunny
Member
Topics: 5 Replies: 37
Registered: 07.Jun.05 |
right then fellas a screenshot it is.
feast yer eyes upon this.
http://www.nilmunny.co.uk/waveform.jpg
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nilmunny
Member
Topics: 5 Replies: 37
Registered: 07.Jun.05 |
| i just realised which part of the mix that is causing the peaks although i dont know why. i made some weird percussion by connecting a mic to a vocoder and banging it off different things. some of the weird noises i made i stuck over the snare to make it sound different. its this weird percussion that must be causing the higher peaks at the bottom, but why would this be. i know this because the peaks are where the snares are. |
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Atlantis
Member
Topics: 84 Replies: 3227
Registered: 14.Jan.03 |
nilmunny wrote on 28 Jun. (21:38) :
right then fellas a screenshot it is.
feast yer eyes upon this.
http://www.nilmunny.co.uk/waveform.jpg
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It's not a DC offset problem, and nothing to really worry about. It just happens to be that when the snare and the other percussion sample combine, the height of the waveform increases at that particular point.
You could solve it somewhat by using EQ to remove the frequency that's stacking up on one of the instruments, but by the looks of it, it's only a single transient, in which case the best way would be to just use a limiter. But, leave that until (and if) you master the tune.
Atlantis [Atlantean Records - digital audio mastering]
mastering engineer/mixing engineer/multiband professor/eq professor |
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