This is interesting. I bought a zoom h4n for recording music and it opened my algorithm up to field recording. Very cool. One thing i noticed English isnt your native language and I applaud your ability to speak it as well as you do. It sounds like you learned from reading. I hear its a bit chaotic to learn, and I can understand why. None of our rules are consistent. A tip i wanted to share with you is in the word "scenario", the "c" is silent. Like a movie "scene", pronounced "seen". Honestly it makes no sense why we do that, but we also do it in the word "scent" and that's pronounced the same as "cent" and "sent". It really makes no "sense" lol.
@@EremEdition Thanks for the tip! I actually started to learn English almost from the beginning as I was living in different countries in Asia, and I speak English with my siblings, but still I understand that I speak English like a Finn 😆. Finns usually learn English early in the school, as it's mandatory, but we are usually not so great with pronounciation.
For more affordable software... DAW - Audacity - Free Dynamic EQ - Wave F6 Video - Davinci Nice video, it's good so see how you do post. Many youtubers just magically have perfect audio.
Hey, Went through all of your field recording parts, good stuff. In this part was a little surprised when you used the track fader to increase the audio level, this would commonly be seen as bad practice (going over 0dB) due to risk of digital clipping, lack of headroom, etc. Anyhow, maybe I am missing something, so wanted to ask if there is any particular reason you used the fader?
Thank you for watching! I guess the track fader is a habit, have been using it forever, mixing it with the other ways to control the volume. As long it works 😎
Gain staging is a tricky subject, but like Niklas says, in the end whatever gets you the result youre looking for. Also, clipping in and of itself does not usually spell the end for audio processing or mastering, it really depends on what you're doing and what you want out of the sound. Use your ears. Its always helpful to ask the question, can I hear the difference or does it sound bad? While its true that digital clipping doesnt tend to sound good, its more of a guideline than a hard and fast rule, I repeat, use your ears.
I don't know but there is a program called Audacity which is generally used for sound editing. Have you used this program before or do you know what the difference is with the paid option?
@@ReyhanHamdi I started with Audacity a long time ago. Haven't used it since then, so I don't know what it's capable right now, but back then it was quite basic. I'm sure you can do the things done in this video with Audacity too, as these are the basics. And it's not really about the DAW, you can do amazing stuff with any DAW when you get to know one well.
Audacity actually has a pretty strong noise removal system for a freeware! Similar to what Niklas shows here, you select a portion of your noise for profile, and then apply your reduction amount. Audacity is quite basic, but its useful in a pinch. Audacity is a multitrack editor but you can use it as a simple two track editor which is helpful also. It even has a feature where you can generate 'noise' files from importing any 'RAW' data into it, so png or jpeg files etc. which can be quite fun!
Thanks for your tutorial, i'm begining on field recording without many resources and i use linux... have you ever tried Audacity? Greetings from Argentina
I started with Audacity long time ago. I think both Audacity and Reaper are good starting points for audio editing. Audacity is not as versatile in the long run, but I'm sure it can do the stuff I explained in the video. There are also a lot of free plugins out there, which in many cases should work well with Audacity. Have fun with field recording!
This is interesting. I bought a zoom h4n for recording music and it opened my algorithm up to field recording. Very cool. One thing i noticed English isnt your native language and I applaud your ability to speak it as well as you do. It sounds like you learned from reading. I hear its a bit chaotic to learn, and I can understand why. None of our rules are consistent. A tip i wanted to share with you is in the word "scenario", the "c" is silent. Like a movie "scene", pronounced "seen". Honestly it makes no sense why we do that, but we also do it in the word "scent" and that's pronounced the same as "cent" and "sent". It really makes no "sense" lol.
@@EremEdition Thanks for the tip! I actually started to learn English almost from the beginning as I was living in different countries in Asia, and I speak English with my siblings, but still I understand that I speak English like a Finn 😆. Finns usually learn English early in the school, as it's mandatory, but we are usually not so great with pronounciation.
For more affordable software...
DAW - Audacity - Free
Dynamic EQ - Wave F6
Video - Davinci
Nice video, it's good so see how you do post. Many youtubers just magically have perfect audio.
Some good ideas!Thanks for your video.Best regards
Thank you!
Hey,
Went through all of your field recording parts, good stuff.
In this part was a little surprised when you used the track fader to increase the audio level, this would commonly be seen as bad practice (going over 0dB) due to risk of digital clipping, lack of headroom, etc.
Anyhow, maybe I am missing something, so wanted to ask if there is any particular reason you used the fader?
Thank you for watching! I guess the track fader is a habit, have been using it forever, mixing it with the other ways to control the volume. As long it works 😎
@@niklaseuren Thanks for the response! Again, thanks for the good content!
Gain staging is a tricky subject, but like Niklas says, in the end whatever gets you the result youre looking for.
Also, clipping in and of itself does not usually spell the end for audio processing or mastering, it really depends on what you're doing and what you want out of the sound. Use your ears. Its always helpful to ask the question, can I hear the difference or does it sound bad? While its true that digital clipping doesnt tend to sound good, its more of a guideline than a hard and fast rule, I repeat, use your ears.
I don't know but there is a program called Audacity which is generally used for sound editing. Have you used this program before or do you know what the difference is with the paid option?
@@ReyhanHamdi I started with Audacity a long time ago. Haven't used it since then, so I don't know what it's capable right now, but back then it was quite basic. I'm sure you can do the things done in this video with Audacity too, as these are the basics. And it's not really about the DAW, you can do amazing stuff with any DAW when you get to know one well.
@@niklaseuren Hmm thank you so much 😊
Audacity actually has a pretty strong noise removal system for a freeware! Similar to what Niklas shows here, you select a portion of your noise for profile, and then apply your reduction amount.
Audacity is quite basic, but its useful in a pinch. Audacity is a multitrack editor but you can use it as a simple two track editor which is helpful also. It even has a feature where you can generate 'noise' files from importing any 'RAW' data into it, so png or jpeg files etc. which can be quite fun!
@@xcryosonx Wow thank you so much
Thanks for your tutorial, i'm begining on field recording without many resources and i use linux... have you ever tried Audacity? Greetings from Argentina
I started with Audacity long time ago. I think both Audacity and Reaper are good starting points for audio editing. Audacity is not as versatile in the long run, but I'm sure it can do the stuff I explained in the video. There are also a lot of free plugins out there, which in many cases should work well with Audacity. Have fun with field recording!