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> > Steinberg makes a denoiser plug-in which judging by the price must be pro > level and powerful. Might do the trick. > The Steinberg denoiser is pretty poor. I'd recomend Sonic Foundry's venerable but still effective Noise Reduction, or Wave's Noise Reduction Plugin Pack (a really pricey alternative, but often better sounding). For Hum reduction, the Waves NR pack has a really good Hum reducer - removes the hum and all harmonics in one. bIz ------------ http://www.groovetronica.com - "Well, it hasn't made it into our playlist, I'm afraid. It's summer so there are no djs here to listen to and play music, so we're just playing automated music right now." ------------ ----- Original Message ----- From: <Aptrev@aol.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2003 6:51 AM Subject: Re: hummer ! > > In a message dated 7/8/03 6:27:52 AM, mpeters@csi.com writes: > > << the recording of the very nice Berlin Livelooping evening (july 4th, > > 2003) is flawed by a loud hum ...is there a software (if possible, for >pc) > that could handle this? >> > > ouch > > I ran it thru the only NR I have, Raygun from arboretum. Seemed to >respond to > a 50 Hertz hum filter. Adjusting some threshold stuff I was able to get the > hum into the background, it is still there but tolerable. > > Steinberg makes a denoiser plug-in which judging by the price must be pro > level and powerful. Might do the trick. > > > BobC > > The Thumb Piano Project > www.mp3.com/thumbpianoproject > http://trundlebox.iuma.com. > http://brokenaxe.iuma.com > >