We've sent a verification link by email
Didn't receive the email? Check your Spam folder, it may have been caught by a filter. If you still don't see it, you can resend the verification email.
Started May 10th, 2017 · 3 replies · Latest reply by AlienXXX 7 years, 6 months ago
It's very easy to give your (voice-)recording a cellphone or radiolike effect. As usual the instruction is given for the 100% free program Audacity.
- Select the sample or the sampleparts you want to have the effect layed over.
- go to Effects -> High Pass Filter
- at Rolloff (dB per octave): select 12 dB
- Cutoff frequency keeps to 1000,0.
- Click OK.
thats all.
balloonhead wrote:
It's very easy to give your (voice-)recording a cellphone or radiolike effect. As usual the instruction is given for the 100% free program Audacity.
I you install FFmpeg library into Audacity, it has AMR cell-phone codecs ... http://manual.audacityteam.org/man/faq_installation_and_plug_ins.html#How_do_I_download_and_install_the_FFmpeg_Import.2FExport_Library.3F
If you then save your audio in AMR format it really does sound like a cellphone : it has the compression artifacts , as well as the reduced bandwidth.
Here is an interesting alternative. A friend of mine was trying to add a phone effect to some vocals in one of his tracks, and could not get it exactly right using plugins.
I suggested he called his mobile phone from hi s landline (or vice-versa) and recorded the vocals/sentence he was trying to create.
It worked wonderfully !
So, yes, you can use VST effect plugins and Audacity effects. But most likely you have access to the real-thing. - Just record it!