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Nelly Furtado singing "Crazy"
one of the many reasons i love music technology
but i didnt use the spectrail repair process like in the video above, but the more normal "get a noise print and then remove that noise print from the entire take" process. this program has a "smoothing" algorithm that gets rid of alot of the artifact that the noise print method can create, for example it can give voices a bell-like quality that it didnt have before etc...
for people who have done alot of noise reduction work and voice editing and similar, the spectral repair above can be a more successful operation than a normal "declicker".
Warcraft Sequel Lets Gamers Play A Character Playing WoW
Parents Plead Not Guilty In Faith-Healing Death
Low Gravity - Mythbusters Bust Moon Landing Conspiracies
we dont have flying cars either...
Dating Tips: How to deal with a woman who plays hard to get
HOLY CRAP!! Special Effects Brought To You By Image Metrics
French rap battle is just as you would expect.
shit shit shit
fucka fucka fucka
shit
muthafacka
ya'll
english is my second language also.
Don't Be Gay
One of the strangest fetishes, balloons
Singing In The Rain Remix
God is Dead - A Wierd Short Film
Tori Amos -Bouncing off Clouds
but... mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm...torrrrrrrrrrrrrri.
Goth or Not -The Gothic Match Game
one of the many reasons i love music technology
seems pritty easy to use to me, i do alot of photoshop work its intresting translating music into a image and then fixing it.
maby you could save the image of a song as a strip print it of stick it on a wall then people could photograph it and then exstract the song from it.
In the future you could do it in real time with a mobile phone by simply taking a photograph of one of the music images. Then your phone decodes it and plays back to you a song or voice recording.
this would save you having to have an active server sending people files over blue tooth. (idea coppy right westy)
i've done something similar in an art project. we had cameras watching various things, one was looking at a road intersection (for rythm) one was looking at... the audience maybe? and one was looking at a dancer (the melody). and the images was translated to sound.
so the dancer would improvise to what she heard, and the music would follow her as well.
there's also synthesizers like Cameleon 5000 that has an algorithm to extract the "sound" out of images. fun stuff with very unpredictable results