Is there a vst plugin that can partially erase a track?

Discussion in 'Working with Sound' started by Pronto, Nov 23, 2018.

  1. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    imagine a pencil drawing, you take an Eraser and partially degrade part of it, so some of the part you've erased is still there, ragged and patchy, but you've essentially partially removed it...it might be the equivalent of a bit of parchment where some words are illegible due to age..i thought of smearing or bitcrushing...i'd like to do this to a bit of a track or mix say halfway through for a couple of seconds....i'd like it to be less "bitty" and more out-of-focus/smeary if i had to choose, but ideally exactly like partial erasure...what would be its analogue/equivalent in digital sound, Is there a VST plugin/s or process whereby you can achieve this please...any spitballing welcome around this idea? thanks for any contributions.
     
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  3. Xupito

    Xupito Audiosexual

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    Are you talking about an "equivalent" in sound FX of a "blur" in images? (always very roughly talking since I haven't understood well your question)
     
  4. rudolph

    rudolph Audiosexual

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    If I use my imagination I will probably think of automation of volume, eq and reverb, volume fade out, more reverb mix and a sudden cut of high frequencies in that moment should do the trick.
     
  5. jazzzz

    jazzzz Platinum Record

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    1. reverse the selected (unwanted) part
    2. what if you heavily reverberate the previous word/phrase for the length of the selected part?
    3. another wild idea: try phase-shifting that selected part
     
  6. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    thanks xupito, yes its difficult for me to try to put it into words...i may try to find a picture to represent it..blur maybe the wrong word..fray..in design (titles for tv shows) about 10 years ago they started making things look grungey rather than clean and neat.there were crackles and frayed edges.grainy, jumping missing frames etc. ..i don't know what you'd call that in design terms, post-something?...maybe its better to think in terms of moving images rather than a photo..but its loose analogy anyway..thanks for having a go
     
  7. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    thankyou for your responses...i suppose something along these lines, (but in audio terms of course so mute or ignore the music) ..whereas titles used to be clean cut and neat..this kind of fraying and crapness, degradation..i realise its a very nebulous idea i'm thinking around, but thats okay

     
  8. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    ..or even scratching away bits of the top layer of a mixed track to reveal layers underneath, in an artistic way?
     
  9. Baxter

    Baxter Audiosexual

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    You can partly phase-cancel a sound (depending on its panning and dryness/wetness) by using dual panning on the stereo output and listening in Sides mode (in that order).
     
  10. Talmi

    Talmi Audiosexual

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    You might find what you're looking for using SpecOps (unfiltered Audio) or Spectrumworx.
    Spectral fxs, there is a whole array of processors made to degrade the sound, dephase it too or smear it, like it seems your looking for. Bonus is for both you can chose the frequency band where you apply the fxs.
    In SpecOps modules like "smear", "MP3ify", "Decapitate", "Dustorm" or "Noisify", etc (in the "Effects" section), might get you there.
    In spectrumworx : in the "timbre", "time" and "phase" sections you'll find the appropriate fxs, just test things out.
     
  11. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    cheers @Baxter i don't understand re: dual panning, do you mean having two identical copies of the same mono information where one is panned to full left and the other full right..i'm interested though to hear how this sounds?
     
  12. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    wow, thanks @Talmi so there ARE specific tools out there geared to this?
     
  13. Talmi

    Talmi Audiosexual

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    Yep, editing at a spectral level (individual harmonics, their phase, etc) is possible, sometimes needed when it's the best course of action for what you aim.
    Those fxs can do similar things - although they accomplish it technically differently - than classical fxs, but they also can do much more.

    That's why I enjoy Bidule so much....
     
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  14. E.T.F

    E.T.F Producer

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    https://sugar-bytes.de/effectrix

    Combinations of stutter, filter and timestretching and chorus might give a sense of partial erasure and smearing to your tracks. IMO its much nicer and can be used more subtly than https://illformed.com/glitch.

    A sidechain trigger [with its own channel muted] could be useful=for example ableton's auto filter, compressor or gate will allow you to scrub, filter or reduce volume according to when it hits- so for example you could use just a kick or even a full drumbeat to duck sections of your track/loop/sound.
    Also the frequency shifter and grain delay in ableton could be perceived as to smear or blur or take sound out of focus...Combinations of erosion, overdrive or saturation mean there are a number of different ways to add [less digital sounding] noise and harmonics to the original signal, especially nice for smearing fx if u add chorus or reverb.
    Try all of these as sends and resample results, try chaining these toghether in a few different ways, The https://u-he.com/products/uhbik/ especially frequency shifter and grain plugins are also great for this sort of thing.
     
    Last edited: Nov 23, 2018
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  15. Baxter

    Baxter Audiosexual

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    I might have made it more complicated than it actually is. I meant a stereo mix = dual mono (as in two mono channels, making one stereo channel).
    You can can pan (pan modulate) a stereo mix into a M/S processor (with Sides solo'ed) and thus cancel out things that are panned and things that are centered. Depending on the spatialness of the sound (reverb, chorus, etc) you can cancel out sounds in various degrees.

    Here is a free M/S plugin: https://www.plugin-alliance.com/en/products/bx_solo.html
     
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  16. nobodyspecial

    nobodyspecial Platinum Record

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    Melodyne DNA
     
  17. ZUK

    ZUK Rock Star

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  18. korte1975

    korte1975 Guest

    did you try Boss' Metal Zone ?
     
  19. Pronto

    Pronto Kapellmeister

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    i might do well to print some of these responses out. cheers
     
  20. fiction

    fiction Audiosexual

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    You can do this to some extent by using a classic noiseprint-based denoiser.
    You select the portion of audio you'd like to "erase" and apply denoising which in that case won't remove noise but rather the sound you've selected.
    This is however limited in practice as you often don't have access to individual sounds in a mix, often many sounds are mixed and hard to separate.
    Before doing this, you might have a try with Melodyne, as @nobodyspecial said, and see how much you're able to separate before doing the denoiser trick.
    Good luck!
    It's fun definitely.
     
  21. Grok

    Grok Producer

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    Magix Spectralayers

    ...Or iZotope RX
     
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