![]() ![]() Yes, this mode in Audition is called spectral editing. This is not something I know how to do with Audition. I just think it's the best tool for an audio restoration job until you get to the RX Advanced level.įor example, Rx offers the possibility to remove guitar finger squeaks along with any trailing fx easily. Sorry if this keeps coming off as an advertisement for Audition. But I seem to remember RX not offering the same customizable flexibility. Of course, I'm very familiar with Audition and I've customized it to fit my work needs. RX offers pretty much the same spectral editing tools, but wasn't as user friendly (to me) as Audition. ![]() The time I spent with RX trying to get it to analyze a sound I wanted to keep and recognize a non-periodic noise (thump, squeak, pop, screech and so forth) so that it could then remove it "automatically" was far longer than just going into Audition spectral view and manually using its various heal/cut/copy/paste/envelope/restoration tools to remove the same noise. That's true of Audition's Noise Reduction process, but I was talking more about the features Audition offers for manually removing noise that neither it nor RX (in my limited experience with the demo) could remove automatically. This allows for a much more surgical removal rather than the destructive hammer of some programs like sound soap or sony. all together that determines what is noise and what is music(or other). RX is the only program I know that will analyze tonality, pitch, volume, etc. Audition uses a much less intrusive form of gated restoration when it comes to noise removal. ![]()
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