122 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
122 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1796
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Title: HPR1796: Audacity - Chains, Notches and Labels
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1796/hpr1796.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:24:02
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---
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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With 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hi, I hack in public radio listeners, my name is Krause, this is my first time recording.
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I often go by the username Cheeto4493 on emails and stuff like that.
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I'm not much of a social person, so you probably won't find me on Twitter or anything,
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any of the other social things like Facebook.
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I vote Ken Fallon a show for quite a while, but I didn't know what to exactly to talk
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about.
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I've been wanting to do something on the Raspberry Pi, but haven't come up with a good project yet.
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All the projects I've been wanting to do just haven't come to fruition.
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Then another project on my back burner that I'm fixing to start that's a how to automate my
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window blind. So hopefully you may be hearing that come up on the list in a few months.
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What I wanted to talk to you today about was Audacity and some tips and tricks
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after listening to John podcast on label track. I just wanted to add a little bit to that and a
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a few couple other tricks that I use often. John talked about labeling tracks for
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kind of help sorting things out. What I use it for a lot of times is exporting
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the actual sound as individual files. A lot of times what I'll do is record like a whole
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album off of a record or tape and then want to transfer it digitally. If you label each one
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of those sections and then you can go into export multiple and you'll actually take the labels
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and use those as your file names. One of the things that I found really helpful is if you look
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over there under file and import you can actually import label tracks. What it is is uses a tab separated
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text file. On each line is the starting position tab ending position tab and then the label name.
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And so what you can do is if you have a album let's say that you know how long each song is
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you can go through and put all those into a text file with say the first song is 360 seconds long
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and you can start at zero and then tab and then 360 and then tab and then your label of your first
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track and then start a new line and then your next track if it starts at 360 or
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360 seconds you put that in your first line and then tab over and then put in the
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the additional say your next track is 100 seconds long then it would be 462 and you just
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basically keep running total of your time all the way through and you just save that as a text
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file and then you can import that into audacity in your project and it will create a label track
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underneath and show all of those labels. I think this might be real helpful if you are doing a
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recording at say like a conference and you just start the recorder at the beginning of a top
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and if you've got a notepad there handy you can just in a stopwatch you can just write down the
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times of different like speakers starting and stopping and the names and then you can import
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all that in as one long track if you're not sitting there hitting the stop and record each time
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and then it will divide those up and label them for you by using the import feature.
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Once you import your labels if you look at that label track you'll notice that in between each label
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is like a greater than less than sign in a circle in the middle just kind of a small icon can actually
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bump them each one over to the appropriate start of that track. If you find you have like a long
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seconds between sections you can actually click on like the greater than symbol and actually
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slide it to the right and it will move the following track down and leave a gap in between that
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when you do an export it won't export that silence so that's another oh handy trick there of
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how to adjust your times. One of the other tricks I wanted to talk to you about today was
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notch filters and a notch filter is basically a way of removing it's kind of like an equalizer
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at a specific frequency and I don't think this comes standard in audacity I've actually imported
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the add-ons and I think it is down in the bottom section of additional plugins for
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audacity and it's called notch filter. Here in America our main frequency is at 60 hertz and a
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lot of times your equipment sometimes they'll pick up sounds based around that frequency and the
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best way to find out this will work for you is to highlight a section of silence that has the
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noise in the background on your track just by clicking and dragging a little section of it a
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couple of seconds long and then if you go up into analyze and click on plot spectrum
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it'll pop up a little window and on that you'll see a graph and if your graph shows some spikes
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at some frequencies this is a good time to use a notch filter because a notch filter will take out
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the spikes when I do this I find three spikes on my recordings I think I have an issue between my
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mixer and my recorder where I usually do recordings that picks up a 60 hertz a 120 hertz
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and a 180 hertz hum and for some reason the 180 hertz is worse than the 60 hertz I think it's
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kind of an additional by adding the frequencies together you get a stronger attenuation there at each
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frequency so what you can do is once you find the frequencies that you need to filter if you'll go
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into back to your track and highlight the sections you want to take the noise out of usually I just do
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the whole track and then go up and click notch filter you'll find it'll pop up and you can insert
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the frequency so I usually start with 60 and then underneath that is Q and that is your how wide
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of a frequency band you're going to cut down and I default is one and I usually go to 10 I find that
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a good number to start at usually takes out just enough but doesn't overlap into the other frequencies
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and you hit ok and apply that then I go up to it and hit notch filter again and do it with the
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120 hertz and then I do the third time at the 180 hertz and I'll add it in some audio clips here
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and so you can hear the differences in that versus using the noise removal tool that's built
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into audacity this is a test recording unmodified this is with notch filters and this is with
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noise removal used sometimes especially on an audio recording that's not very loud for the speakers
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not too very close to the mic and so you have a lot of background noise especially if you have
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like I said spikes on your plot spectrum that are noise frequencies that if you try doing just
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noise removal tool it will make your audio not sound as good it actually takes out too much
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frequencies in the area where you're talking as opposed to the notch filter which takes out
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frequencies of specific notches and the third thing I want to talk about today was chains often when
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I'm editing files and audacity I find that I'm repeating the same tasks every time I do a file
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like normalize to bring up the volume levels a lot of times I'll do a run the leveler
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which kind of levels out the highs and the lows so if you get somebody who's real dynamic and
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they're speaking it's real loud and then they get quiet and then a little loud again
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leveler really helps bring that down to a consistent volume level then I apply the notch filter
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like three times and then after I'm done with the filter I usually end the leveler I go through
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and I normalize it one more time and then the last thing I do is export it as a different like MP3 file
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well if you do the same thing over and over again chains is real handy for that
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because it basically what you're doing is chaining those tools together if you go over to file and
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down to modify chains you'll see you'll pop it up you'll see there's already one built into
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audacity called I think it's called MP3 conversion I believe it is if you look on the right it'll say
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MP3 export and basically what you see on that right tab is what you're doing each time
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and see you can go down there to the bottom and you can click add and then it'll pop up a little
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window and you choose what you want to modify if you choose normalize and then you can go in and
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adjust your basically what I would say your default settings for that modifier save it
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and then you can insert another and so like I said I usually do I add them in in the order
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that I normally do normalize leveler and then my three notch filters and then the last thing
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you can do is to export and then end is then the very last thing there save that save it as a
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name you'll recognize I use to call it something like clean audio file over there and so what you do
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is you can once you've got your chain setup click on file and use chains and then pull up the chain
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you want to use and apply it to your track and it'll do all those steps all at once it saves it
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but the one of the neat features of the chains is you can apply it to multiple files
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without even opening the file up to edit it if you go up to chains and apply chains and multiple
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files you just click the files that you want to do they all have to be in the same directory
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and then apply chains and it'll open the file apply the chain and then if you have export
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MP3 or export org setting your thing it'll export those into a sub directory called clean
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in your same directory it opened them in and that's a good way to do bulk files so if you've got
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several files that you want to change it once it's a good way to do that I have to learn
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scripting to do it in a command line to open up and apply all those things but I hope you've
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learned something from my tips and tricks today and hopefully it won't be too long before I
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do another podcast recording thank you and have a good day
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you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org
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