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How do I remove pops after recording?

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Submitted by anonymous on

Hi,

I have a vocal recording which, unfortunatly, I'm stuck with (I cant get the singer back to re-record).



It has a couple of pops in it on the P's and B's. Im very new to recording and would like to remove these myself.



How would I best do this, should I try to find a PopFilter VST plugin , or is there a better way to do it?



I use Cubase SX3 currently but am happy to use other packages if people recommend them (I dont think Cubase is really a vocal editing package as such more of a mastering one?).



Thanks!

AM.

Comments

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hueseph

AngryMonkey wrote: I use Cubase SX3 currently but am happy to use other packages if people reccomend them (I dont think Cubase is really a vocal editing package as such more of a mastering one?).



I'm sorry but, what exactly do you know about Cubase then? Have you read the manual? :? Do you have the manual? Is the Dongle firmly seated in the usb port?



I think you will need to learn to live with the pop. You could probably try and draw it out in an editor but chances are you will make more of a mess of it than if you just leave it alone.



There are certain things that just need to be dealt with before they ever go to disc.

Thu, 06/26/2008 - 09:49 Permalink
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jonyoung

I draw a notch at the transient with a volume envelope and use both "fast" and "slow" curves on either side of the center node where I do the cut. The resulting notch has a "U" shape. Experiment with how much to cut and how far apart the outer nodes are. After you get one right, it's like riding a bicycle. Explosives don't scare me anymore.

Thu, 06/26/2008 - 14:40 Permalink
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Boswell

The usual quick'n'dirty fix for pops is to zoom in (time axis) on the pop, select the length of it (say 100ms) and apply a high-pass filter of around 200Hz to the selected section. Leave the amplitude the same.



Best done on a copy of the track so you can experiment with different HP filter settings and length of the selection, always going back to a new copy of the original for each trial. You may need to go as high as 350Hz for the HP filter, but it's a matter of finding the balance between the unpleasantness of the original pop and the mangling due to HP filtering.

Sat, 06/28/2008 - 06:52 Permalink