----- Forwarded message from Michael Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -----

From: Michael Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2005 13:55:59 -0500
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Sound filtering software.
X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.619.2)

On Feb 2, 2005, at 12:01 AM, Joseph Chamberlain, DDS wrote:

>Do any of you know of a software that I could use to isolate the 
>frequency
>of the human voice and then clean everything else to make the recording
>clearer and easier to listen to ?

<slips on audio engineer hat>

If I had a nickel for every client who came in my studio asking the 
same question...

The human voice has an amazing range in frequency and in dB.  It's one 
of the most versatile instruments ever.  The subtleties are amazing 
when combining guttural sounds with sibilance and resonance, as well as 
air flow and labial manipulation (which you probably understand being a 
DDS).  This presents a great difficulty when trying to do what you've 
just asked.

For example, in television and radio, you have an effective frequency 
range of about 15kHz which is more than sufficient for the human voice. 
 However, you're limited to 20dB of dynamic range.  This isn't a 
problem if your speaker is doing a Ben Stein (Bueller?  Bueller?) 
impression.  On a cassette tape, you have about 40-50dB, and on 16 bit 
PCM digital audio, you have ~96dB (which is probably more than the room 
you're recording in or listening in).

The human voice needs about 4kHz to be distinguishable from mumbling.  
The "presence" of the human voice is (arguably) around 3.8kHz.  If you 
really want to do it right, you'll need about 12kHz to get everything 
without sounding like a telephone, although that could sound a bit too 
sibilant if you aren't careful.  Basically, what you'll need is a 
bandpass filter and an expander.  Here's what they do:

Bandpass filter - Cuts off the low end below a certain frequency and 
the high end off at a different frequency.  You get for example, 150Hz 
through 4kHz.  Anything below 150Hz will be dropped and anything above 
4kHz will be dropped.  This should get rid of the rumble of the air 
handlers down low and the rush of the air through the vents up high.  
it will also sound a little muffled, but you should be able to hear 
everything just fine.

Expander - Makes everything below a certain decibel level quieter.  You 
set a cutoff point, for example 50dB.  Anything below that point will 
unaffected.  Everything above that point will be raised according to 
the ratio you set, for example 1:2, effectively making 60dB sound like 
80dB (10dB above the setting at a 1:2 ratio gives a 20dB rise).

Now, if there's a lot of noise, using these simple tools is not enough. 
 Many/most recording studios have a "NoNoise?" suite, or "Pro Tools?" 
suite with DINR (Digidesign Intelligent Noise Reduction...pronounced 
like dinner).  Each of these two applications will take a sample of the 
noise, and dynamically set filtering through the entire sound file to 
give you a "clean" version of the file.

The software and hardware costs thousands of dollars, but it's well 
worth going to a studio where they've done this type thing before.  
It's not going to clean it up like you see on the spy thriller movies, 
but it can clean it up a lot to make things much more audible.

IIRC, the Nat King Cole and Natalie Cole album, "Unforgettable", was 
done using Sonic Solutions NoNoise?.  The engineers took the old 
recordings, cleaned up the noise, removed his vocal, and then recorded 
her vocal.  When Kenny G came to Washington DC to play on BET, his 
monitor engineer came to my studio because they had 
lost/broken/whatever the original CD he used to "play with" Louis 
Armstrong.  We loaded the song from CD, removed the saxophone at the 
certain points where Kenny played the melody (using DINR), and burned a 
new CD so he could play it live.

This may be a little more power than you need, but it's effectively the 
same thing, and it sounds pretty good.  It also took a LOT longer to do 
that that it would take to clean up your recording to make it more 
audible.

Now, I'll take my audio engineer hat off and get back to being a UNIX 
administrator geek...

<removes audio engineer hat and goes back to his slashdot hat>

-Michael

---------------------------------------
Sometimes your joy is the source of your smile, but sometimes your 
smile can be the source of your joy.

                                        --Thich Nhat Hanh

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