Strange popping sound with a stranger solution
Posted: Wed Jul 29, 2020 11:36 pm
Hello,
I recently recorded some clarinet playing using a Zoom H2n portable recorder, which I was using as an external USB mic input for Audacity (2.4.2). After recording, I was disappointed to hear popping and clicking sounds. An example is attached. I realized when I isolated the pop and zoomed in very closely (.63s in the attached sound file), I would find an aberration (see attached image). To fix it, I tried the "repair" effect, which minimized it but it was still there. Then I tried deleting it, and there was still a noticeable sound, as there often is when you delete a sample. So then, I tried *deleting it, then cutting and pasting the second half, overlapping it with the first, and fading the two ends (how I usually do audio splicing).* Still, there was a sound. The ODD thing is, after all of that (and only after taking all of those steps between the *'s), when I tapped "undo" to get back to the original sample, the aberration was GONE. It fixed itself.
Of course, I tried it with the attached sample, and it didn't work. It doesn't matter. My question is, what could have caused this "flat spot" in the first place, and why/how does Audacity seem to be fixing it when I fuss with it? For now, I'm just going to go pop by pop and hopefully get rid of them all, but it would be nice to prevent them in the future.
I recently recorded some clarinet playing using a Zoom H2n portable recorder, which I was using as an external USB mic input for Audacity (2.4.2). After recording, I was disappointed to hear popping and clicking sounds. An example is attached. I realized when I isolated the pop and zoomed in very closely (.63s in the attached sound file), I would find an aberration (see attached image). To fix it, I tried the "repair" effect, which minimized it but it was still there. Then I tried deleting it, and there was still a noticeable sound, as there often is when you delete a sample. So then, I tried *deleting it, then cutting and pasting the second half, overlapping it with the first, and fading the two ends (how I usually do audio splicing).* Still, there was a sound. The ODD thing is, after all of that (and only after taking all of those steps between the *'s), when I tapped "undo" to get back to the original sample, the aberration was GONE. It fixed itself.
Of course, I tried it with the attached sample, and it didn't work. It doesn't matter. My question is, what could have caused this "flat spot" in the first place, and why/how does Audacity seem to be fixing it when I fuss with it? For now, I'm just going to go pop by pop and hopefully get rid of them all, but it would be nice to prevent them in the future.