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  • Podcast Editing In Izotope Rx
    카테고리 없음 2020. 9. 1. 23:50



    Mar 14, 2017 Reaper and Izotope RX 5 (Audio editing software) Reaper is a powerful cross-platform digital audio workstation that supports multi-track editing, plugins, and just about anything else you’d expect from a tool that you can use to edit radio news stories or music. While this is not all the plug ins, the ones it does have are very relevant for podcast editing - izotope Rx is what we are all using in industry post production work. Its become the standard must have for any dialog editing work in the industry. If you are intimidated on the learning curve - esp when you get into spectral repair and other.

    RX 6 offers powerful new features and an enhanced workflow built to meet the needs of professional engineers in music, post-production and broadcast. With this release, we have addressed some of the most pressing problems encountered by our veteran users. Welcome to the most dynamic edition of RX to date!

    Clean up multiple tracks at the same time in the RX Audio Editor

    • Composite View: Collect up to 16 audio files into a single, composite view within the RX Audio Editor. Make an edit, or select a process, and have it instantly applied across every file, saving hours on film scores, drum tracks, live recordings, and more.

    3 new modules in RX 6 Advanced built on iZotope’s innovations in machine-learning and intelligent signal processing

    Podcast Editing In Izotope Rx

    • De-wind: designed to reduce or remove intermittent low-end wind rumble that occurs when wind blows into a microphone.
    • De-rustle: removes distracting lavalier microphone rustle and other rustling sounds from your dialogue.
    • Dialogue Isolate: extracts dialogue from noisy backgrounds and lets them take center stage.

    Podcast Editing In Izotope Rx 10

    New tools for music, podcasts, and audiobooks, available in RX Standard & Advanced

    • De-ess: Tame harsh sibilance and piercing transients with our new Spectral De-essing algorithm and a VCA model for a more classic sound. De-ess is available as a module and as a plug-in.
    • Mouth De-click: Remove mouth clicks and smacks with this new module and plug-in built specifically for cleaning up dialogue, vocals, and voiceovers.
    • Breath Control: Attenuate breathy tracks without destroying the life and intimacy of the performance.
    • De-bleed: Reduce or eliminate bleed on drums and other acoustic instruments like piano, vocals, guitar, and even click tracks.
    • MP3 Export: Export and Batch Process MP3 audio files directly from RX 6 Audio Editor.

    Improvements & optimizations across all of RX

    • Find All Similar: Locate and identify problem sounds like beeps, bird chirps, or clicks more quickly and accurately with the addition of Find All Similar.
    • Module List Filters: select the features you use most often and save them as presets for different workflows.
    • Low-latency De-click: an improved algorithm inside the De-click plug-in for real-time processing.
    • Refined UX & UI: Find the tools you need faster and use them more efficiently with extensive improvements to usability across RX Audio Editor and RX Plug-ins.
    • RX 6 Elements: The powerful tools of the RX Plug-in Pack (De-clip, De-click, De-hum and Voice De-noise) are combined with the RX 6 Audio Editor for analysis, spectral editing, and offline processing.
    27th August 2019
    Gear Addict
     
    Steinberg SpectraLayers audio cleaning (vs iZotope RX)

    Podcast Editing In Izotope Rx 3

    Hi guys
    We are doing a lot of recording on-site (usually of solo piano, or piano with one other instrument) in locations where there are ambient noises. These noises can be anything from cars passing, or birds tweeting - through to (sometimes) aircraft overhead.
    We used iZotope RX for a few months using a rental option, and the results were very good. We were able to us its spectral editing to pull out specific unwanted sounds, without and perceptible harm to the actual audio we wanted to keep. It even worked for exposed acoustic piano, which was very pleasing.
    I'm now looking to but a spectral editing tool, and have seen that Steinberg offer SpectraLayers - which integrates with ARA within Cubase for seamless editing. It seems to feature the same spectral editing functionality as RX.
    I'm keen to hear from anyone who might have used SpectraLayers. Is it effective? Have you compared it to RX, and is there any difference between the results you can get from the two tools?
    Any first-hand experience and thoughts would be very much appreciated!
    Cheers,
    Mike

    Izotope Rx Elements

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