![]() So you may in reality be down to needing only declick and denoise. You can try derumbling with either DeNoise LF or Audacity High Pass, but you may not detect any change-depending on whatever turntable you may have used. In Davies-land, that would mean DeNoise LF for derumble, ClickRepair for declick, decrackle, debuzz, and lastly DeNoise for dehiss.ĭecrackle (sounds like frying bacon) and debuzz are usually associated with 78 rpm shellac discs and likely would not apply to your situation-leaving you with derumble, declick, dehiss. You can load a bunch of songs into the ClickRepair and process them all at once-either with identical settings or with individual settings.ĭerumble, declick, decrackle, debuzz, dehiss The batch functions in Davies' applications are superb. For those reasons, I will pass on DeNoise/Denoise LF. DeNoise LF is excellent at what it does (primarily reduce very low frequencies as from turntable rumble)-but I think you can do that with Audacity High Pass filter. DeNoise does not seem to be an improvement on Audacity Noise Removal and in fact is harder to use because you cannot zoom into the waveform and grab the sample noise with the mouse as easily. It is actually 2 application: DeNoise and DeNoise LF (which stands for low frequency). It works very well at default settings and can process a 3 minute song in a few seconds.ĭeNoise is different. They are $40 each thereafter.Īfter evaluation, my opinion is that ClickRepair is excellent and a timesaver. You can use them for 21 days at no charge. The ones you might need are ClickRepair and DeNoise. I downloaded all of Brian Davies' apps about a month ago.
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