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Hello, I'm a beginner at using Adobe Audition and right now I'm having difficulty with some bird sounds in the background. The chirp is very sharp and loud as the it was in the same room as the person being recorded and it can overlap at times with the voice. How do I get rid of or reduce it so the sound isn't as present?
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Couldn't tell you for sure without hearing a bit of the file - but in general, getting rid of something that's actually louder than the wanted sound never works that well - the best you could hope for is to mitigate it slightly. I'd guess that nobody monitored this when it was being recorded...
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Like I said - can't tell you for sure without hearing a sample. But you should at least be able to use the Dynamics Processor's Vocal Limiter preset with a bit of tweaking to reduce the levels where it's louder than the speaker. That said, if it does this at the same time as the speech, then you stand no chance.
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Thank you! I'll try that.
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Hi there, one way that night help out is to use the Spectral Frequency Display.
I have put my descriptions of each step in the pictures so when you click on them it will tell you what to look for and do in each step.
Hope this help my friend. Good luck.
Charles
O
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So you didn't read the bit about 'overlaps', then?
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Hi Steve,
I did. He mentioned that it was a " Sharp" sound. Using spectral Frequency you can see the where the sound lands in the frequency range Sharp sounds are usually furthur up on the frequency range or come out as a brighter color spot and he can pinpoint the chirps, etc... and he can also adjust the opacity of the brush head the take off smaller or deeper layers and the thickness of the stroke itself also in order to be a little more accurate and fine tune as he removes the unwanted noise.
Have a great day, 😊
Charles
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Okay, so you don't really understand the problem with overlaps. If you remove the higher frequencies from a sound that overlaps speech, you will materially affect the speech as well - in a pretty bad way, as a rule. What you are proposing is not a practical solution, I'm afraid.
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Hello Steve,
Im sorry that I chimed in to try and help. I appologize to the person that posted and to you, that I expressed a solution that has helped me and wanted to share.
Good day to both.
default28yk4v4dddnb, please do not attempt to even try or play with the method that I suggested, it will never help you in this situation, please listen to Steve.
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You are correct - the OP shouldn't do this, as it's nothing more than a time-wasting exercise. The only benefit would be that by doing this, you'd learn first-hand what doesn't work with overlapped sounds. And that's the point here; your example doesn't contain any. If it did, it would fail as a method for the reasons I've said.
You should bear in mind that I've been doing this for a living for a very long time, and I actually know what I'm talking about. One of the things about helping with problems is that in order to do this effectively, then first you have to understand what the problem actually is. And that's the difference between trying to help, and actually helping.
Some people find this rather painful to accept, and tend to resort to sarcasm in print - which also doesn't work very well. That does not detract from the truth of it, though.