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Forums Forums General Discussion Isolating the MUSIC on a COMPOSER COMMENTARY

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  • #35793
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Hey, 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.

    #43498
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Rip 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.)

    #43501
    Anonymous
    Guest

    thanks but can you give me the name of a program. I’ve been looking for hours.

    #43502
    Anonymous
    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.

    #43503
    Anonymous
    Guest

    hopefully sum1 mite be able to record the complete spider-man score, or atleast the little excerpts in the menus

    #43505
    Anonymous
    Guest

    thanks

    #43514
    Anonymous
    Guest

    If 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)

    #43518
    Anonymous
    Guest

    hey knight : did you think about the possibility to extract some parts not included in the soundtrack ? ;-)

    #43520
    Anonymous
    Guest

    heh, he got you there Knight

    #43525
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Wouldn’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.

    #43530
    Anonymous
    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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