Improving audio on recorded lecture
Posted: Sat Feb 25, 2012 12:37 am
Hello.
I have a lecture that I would like to improve the audio of. It looks like the wrong microphone actually got recorded, so while the speaker was wearing a clip-on which worked fine in the lecture room, the audio in the recording seems to have been taken from the podium mic and sounds really awful.
I don't really know much about audio processing and I was hoping that somebody might be up for the challenge of taking a listen to the attached file and coming up with some pointers on what I should try to do to clean this thing up.
I know about the basic stuff, noise removal and compression, and while that my attempts (I didn't fiddle much with the parameters of the filters) improves it quite a bit I would like to know if anyone has ideas on how to do better. I'm especially annoyed by the "barrel sound"... it's not exactly echo but I think you'll know what I mean if you listen to the clip. There's probably a well known technique for improving this since it's quite common to hear this when the microphone is too far away.
Of course I'd be interested to hear how good you guys can make this clip sound and if you'd be willing to share your magic tricks I'd apply it to the whole track... and you could get a very interesting lecture about Alan Turing and his code breaking work in WWII as a reward
Any help greatly appreciated,
Stefan Freyr.
I have a lecture that I would like to improve the audio of. It looks like the wrong microphone actually got recorded, so while the speaker was wearing a clip-on which worked fine in the lecture room, the audio in the recording seems to have been taken from the podium mic and sounds really awful.
I don't really know much about audio processing and I was hoping that somebody might be up for the challenge of taking a listen to the attached file and coming up with some pointers on what I should try to do to clean this thing up.
I know about the basic stuff, noise removal and compression, and while that my attempts (I didn't fiddle much with the parameters of the filters) improves it quite a bit I would like to know if anyone has ideas on how to do better. I'm especially annoyed by the "barrel sound"... it's not exactly echo but I think you'll know what I mean if you listen to the clip. There's probably a well known technique for improving this since it's quite common to hear this when the microphone is too far away.
Of course I'd be interested to hear how good you guys can make this clip sound and if you'd be willing to share your magic tricks I'd apply it to the whole track... and you could get a very interesting lecture about Alan Turing and his code breaking work in WWII as a reward
Any help greatly appreciated,
Stefan Freyr.