![]() Someone else uploaded it, and after all these years, no one objected so it is still there. This is my work, but I did not upload it to YouTube because of the copyright issues. Here's an example of several of these techniques. This still produces an interruption in the flow of the audio, but not as jarring as a beep or silence. Do what Craig Ferguson did on the Late Show, which is to insert the same person saying a nonsense phrase. This one only works if you have the right material.ħ. Use the Elastique time stretch for the audio adjacent to the bad spot, and slow down the adjacent material. This sometimes works, but it creates a "Max Headroom" stutter that can be annoying, especially if done too often.Ħ. This works great if the offending item is a tone (like a censor beep), AND if the original material is still there, buried underneath the tone.ĥ. Use iZotope RX to remove the offending sound. Sometimes you can copy over the top of the original, dropping its volume somewhat.Ĥ. Find something where the same person is saying or singing something that will fit, and insert this in place of the offensive sound. This can produce the best results, by far. ![]() Copy from some other part of the material. Sometimes it works brilliantly, other times it fails.ģ. iZotope RX has a "repair" function that can fill a blank gap with the surrounding material. This was the least successful of all the techniques.Ģ. Since it was music (well, some of it was rap, so as Ravel once said about Bolero: "unfortunately, it contains no music) I had to do it in a way that preserved the key and rhythm of the music.ġ. I used several techniques to remove/alter the lyrics. The music was submitted by the kids and included lots of songs with explicit lyrics that would have offended many. Years ago I had to create DVDs for high school students and their parents. Primary Monitor: ASUS ProArt 31.5" 1440p HDR10 Monitor PA328QV Sound card: Realtek S1220A on motherboard. Power supply: SeaSonic SS-750KM3 750W 80 PLUS GOLD Certified Full Modular Active PFC Power Supplyĭrive Bay: Kingwin KF-256-BK 2.5" and 3.5" Trayless Hot Swap Rack with USB 3 RAM: CORSAIR Vengeance 64GB (2 x 32GB) 288-Pin PC RAM DDR5 5600 (PC5 44800) Desktop Memory Model CMK64GX5M2B5600C40ĭisk O/S & Programs: WD Black SN850 NVMe SSD WDS100T1X0E - SSD - 1 TB - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe)ĭisk Active Projects: 1TB & 2TB WD BLACK SN750 NVMe Internal PCI Express 3.0 x4 Solid State Drivesĭisk Other: WD Ultrastar/Hitachi Hard Drives: WDBBUR0080BNC-WRSN, HGST HUH728080ALE600, 724040ALE640, HDS3020BLA642Ĭase: LIAN LI PC-90 Black Aluminum ATX Full Tower CaseĬPU cooling: CORSAIR - iCUE H115i RGB PRO XT 280mm Radiator CPU Liquid Cooling System ![]() GPU: Currently intel on-die video adapter Just click on the "X" logo to activate / disable the encryption mode.Motherboard: ASUS ProArt Z790-CREATOR WIFIĬPU: Intel Core i9-13900K - Core i9 13th Gen Raptor Lake 24-Core (8P+16E) P-core Base Frequency: 3.0 GHz E-core Base Frequency: 2.2 GHz LGA 1700 125W Intel UHD Graphics 770 Desktop Processor - BX8071513900K In this mode, the plugin process the audio signal and apply an audio encryption that make your audio unrecognisable. You can record your censoring session by automatising the "beep" parameter, or just record a MIDI track! A very fast crossfade is applied to prevent for unwanted "clicks". ![]() ![]() The duration of the 1000 Hz beep sound is determined by the time you hold the "-18" button or the sustain time of the MIDI note you play. The beep sound is a classic 1 KHz sinus sound, the famous "beep" used in film / TV industry for censoring profanity and explicit contents. It is used as insert on audio track / bus / master and works on the sound, it has two modes:Ī "bleep censor" is inserted in replacement of the audio signal when you press (and hold) the "-18" button or when pressing any MIDI note (you have to assign a MIDI track to the plugin for that!. CensorCut is a VST plugin effect for censoring your audio content. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |