


cymbals) that are panned to the centre are left intact) and/or some sort of pseudo-stereo effect to add back some sense of width as the basic process leaves you with just a mono track, but the subtraction of one side from the other is how the underlying effect works. The more sophisticated plugins have high- and low-pass filters to isolate the vocal range before they do the subtraction (so that low (e.g. They do this by subtracting the right channel from the left channel, something you can do yourself in SF without any plugins. What they all do is basically to remove anything that is panned to the centre whilst leaving behind those things that are panned wide left or right. Nothing that calls itself a "Vocal Remover" is really a vocal remover. You're almost certainly not doing anything wrong.

While all this sounds very negative the upside of it is that if you do find tracks that are orchestrated accompaniment only they are fantastic and perfect for a singer to record with. Their new website does have some samples for some of the tracks which is an improvement. In order to try and get ahead of it I went there because they aren't very far from where I live.īut they won't even let you hear the tracks before you buy them. That sounds fake if a vocalist sings with it. The midi piano only tracks sound fine if that's what you want.Īlso, some of the orchestrated songs include the lead melody with the accompaniment instead of just the accompaniment. The problem with the company is that they don't tell you. However, be advised that some of the soundtracks are midi garbage and sound it. Music Mnus One AKA Pocket Songs is a much better option.
#Sound forge audio studio vocal eraser plug in professional#
They certainly aren't designed for creating a professional soundtrack for a singer to use to make a recording. I have yet to see one of these gimmicks work well.
