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4 answers

I agree with luvs2puff i would like some more details, this is something I've been looking for. Please update,many thanks.

2006-10-01 10:41:01 · answer #1 · answered by dontdoweekends 5 · 0 0

Guys, this is impossible. I have countless students who ask me to do this at school. The vocal parts of a CD are mixed together with the backing track, they are not separate tracks. The sound is all blended together. It would be like making orange squash and then trying to get the squash back out of the water - it's all mixed in.

The best you can do is reduce the vocal parts a little using filters. Basically, the human voice has a limited range which sits (unsurprisingly) in the middle of the range of human hearing. You can take this range of frequencies out of a recording using filters, but you will also remove much of the sound produced by the instruments. What will be left will be all the stuff with frequencies above and below the range of the human voice.

Record companies can do this trick because they have access to the multi-track recordings of the performances where the vocal line(s) will be on separate tracks to the rest of the instruments. They just turn down the faders on these tracks and record the instrumental backing - that is how Karaoke Cd's are made.

Sorry to disappoint.
Foxy.

2006-10-01 10:51:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I like the others are very interested?

2006-10-01 10:47:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Interesting... Please update your question with the names of the programs u do have.. I would like to check into this... Thanks... Sorry for no answer

2006-10-01 10:36:00 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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