[linux-audio-user] RE: I just want to EQ the quiet parts

philicorda philicorda at ntlworld.com
Fri Aug 26 18:51:00 EDT 2005


> Message: 3
> Date: Fri, 26 Aug 2005 11:47:10 -0700
> From: Mike Jewell <mj405 at oneupaudio.com>
> Subject: [linux-audio-user] I just want to EQ the quiet parts
> To: linux-audio-user at music.columbia.edu
> Message-ID: <1125082030.31648.30.camel at localhost.localdomain>
> Content-Type: text/plain
> 
> Hi LAUs,
> 
> I'm pretty new to all this but have been using Audacity with plugins,
> etc and have recently been experimenting with Ardour and Jamin.
> 
> What I want to do is EQ the "quiet" parts only of a wav file.  The file
> is a tape recording of some source (probably LP) done on a cheap
> recorder.  There is lots of rumble that is mostly noticeable (of course)
> in the quieter spots on the track.  Playing with Jamin's 30 band EQ
> shows that filtering out a band or two around 200 Hz helps a LOT but
> this wrecks the bass in the louder "musical" sections.

What I would do is...
Render a couple of versions through Jamin. One with the severe 200hz cut
for the quieter sections, and one with settings that work well on the
louder bits.
Then, line them up in Ardour so they start at exactly the same time and
cut/crossfade between them so the bass cut version is only used where
it's needed.
Longish crossfades should make the changeovers inaudible.

> 
> Is there something like a noise gate that, instead of silencing
> everything below a certain threshold, would apply a given EQ to it
> instead?  With all the cool Linux Audio tools out there, it seems like
> there must be some way to do this.  (Maybe Jamin can and I just don't
> see it.)

I guess you could use the spectral gate in freqtweak to do this. It does
tend to change the sound a little (It's not really meant for this kind
of thing) though considering the quality of the source it could well be
acceptable.

Just stay away from the delay, feedback and warp settings or you'll be
playing with it all night... :)

If Jamin had inverse ratios for the compressor sections then you could
do some expansion. Perhaps if you ask the authors they will look into
it?

> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Mike
> Mike Jewell
> One-Up Audio





More information about the Linux-audio-user mailing list