Interview: What to do about the noise on the non-speaking pa
Posted: Tue Jul 15, 2008 12:02 am
Over the weekend I did my first interview using SkypeOut and MX Skype Recorder. Worked like a charm. (I'm a real noob and at this point in my podcasting, I'm going for quick-and-dirty. Later I'll enhance my skills.)
The only problem is that I notice that there's a little bit of noise on the track of the person who isn't speaking. What would be the best approach here? I'm using Audacity 1.2.6.
1. Ignore it. No one else will really hear it.
2. Use Audacity's Noise Removal to clean up those sections.
3. Use volume control and turn down the non-speaking track until it's that person's turn to speak.
Other suggestions? I'm looking for quick and "good enough."
Someone suggested I use a noise gate, but I didn't find any effect by that name. The nearest I could find were hard limiter, high pass filter, and low pass filter. Would any of those be good?
I plan to do more interviews this way. Any suggestions on how to keep the noise low on the non-speaker's side? Sometimes the noise is a click, like the person moved or something (I'm wearing a headset, so that's possible.)
Thanks!
Morven
http://www.morvenwestfield.com
http://www.myspace.com/morvenwestfield
podcast.morvenwestfield.com
The only problem is that I notice that there's a little bit of noise on the track of the person who isn't speaking. What would be the best approach here? I'm using Audacity 1.2.6.
1. Ignore it. No one else will really hear it.
2. Use Audacity's Noise Removal to clean up those sections.
3. Use volume control and turn down the non-speaking track until it's that person's turn to speak.
Other suggestions? I'm looking for quick and "good enough."
Someone suggested I use a noise gate, but I didn't find any effect by that name. The nearest I could find were hard limiter, high pass filter, and low pass filter. Would any of those be good?
I plan to do more interviews this way. Any suggestions on how to keep the noise low on the non-speaker's side? Sometimes the noise is a click, like the person moved or something (I'm wearing a headset, so that's possible.)
Thanks!
Morven
http://www.morvenwestfield.com
http://www.myspace.com/morvenwestfield
podcast.morvenwestfield.com