Forums › Forums › General Discussion › Isolating the MUSIC on a COMPOSER COMMENTARY
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- December 24, 2002 at 2:29 pm #35793
Anonymous
GuestHey, does anyone know the name of the program the isolates and deletes the composers voice on a isolated score track of a DVD? Ryan, you did it in your planet of the apes section.
December 24, 2002 at 3:59 pm #43498Anonymous
GuestRip the 5.1 audio tracks from the DVD and convert them to .aiff- or .wav-files.
Delete center- and surround-.aiffs. Bounce left/right-.aiffs to a stereo-file.
(Software to do this can be found at http://www.versiontracker.com.)December 24, 2002 at 7:21 pm #43501Anonymous
Guestthanks but can you give me the name of a program. I’ve been looking for hours.
December 24, 2002 at 10:10 pm #43502Anonymous
Guest“DVDExtractor 0.9b” to, well, extract audio and video from a DVD.
“BBDemux” to demux the ac3-track from the VOB.
“mAC3dex” to decode the ac3-track to .aiff-files with 44,1kHz downsampling.
“ProTools” to bounce the tracks.December 24, 2002 at 10:37 pm #43503Anonymous
Guesthopefully sum1 mite be able to record the complete spider-man score, or atleast the little excerpts in the menus
December 25, 2002 at 8:04 am #43505Anonymous
Guestthanks
December 27, 2002 at 4:08 am #43514Anonymous
GuestIf you take out the center track, you are loosing some of the music. Here is a better idea: BUY THE SOUNDTRACK! It has what you are looking for and won’t take you forever to get. I can’t believe you would acually sit there and try to remove everything but the music on a commentary….that is just insane…
Knight (Who has only fixed really low quality music samples so that they where tollerable)
December 27, 2002 at 6:12 pm #43518Anonymous
Guesthey knight : did you think about the possibility to extract some parts not included in the soundtrack ?
December 27, 2002 at 6:49 pm #43520Anonymous
Guestheh, he got you there Knight
December 28, 2002 at 2:55 pm #43525Anonymous
GuestWouldn’t the left and right channels contain sound effects and directional dialogue? Also, very few music scores are segregated to the front right and left channels.
December 28, 2002 at 9:55 pm #43530Anonymous
Guest>If you take out the center track, you are loosing some of the music.
true.
>Wouldn’t the left and right channels contain sound effects and directional dialogue?
if it’s an isolated score track: no.
>Also, very few music scores are segregated to the front right and left channels.
most orchestral scores are mixed to make you feel like sitting in front of the orchestra: left/center/right with very few surround information (mostly reverb). There are just a few scores (like Fight Club – which is an electronic score) that make heavy use of the surround channels.
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