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Post by gravesnumber9 on Jan 17, 2024 14:59:00 GMT -6
Saw someone talking about it on Instagram. Haven't dug in much but it looks interesting in light of our AI conversation. Again, just glancing here but I'd be very curious to see how well it works. I have some old tracks that I never got TV mixes which has actually cost me at least one licensing contract (annoying since I'm sure they have the tech to do it but whatever). Thoughts? hitnmix.com
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Post by tasteliketape on Jan 17, 2024 15:13:12 GMT -6
I had pretty good results separating acoustic guitar bleed out from a vocal track . I only used it once for this particular project in demo mode and didn’t buy it . I also found this one and it’s free ultimatevocalremover.com/Not sure I used it fo intended purpose.
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Post by Darren Boling on Jan 18, 2024 10:57:47 GMT -6
Thanks for the heads up. I've been using lalal.ai for separation on a restoration project. Does better than RX and Spectralayers on this particular material. Will give this a test as I'm still in that project.
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hey212
Junior Member
Posts: 61
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Post by hey212 on Jan 18, 2024 11:23:45 GMT -6
I've tested a bunch of these, Acoustica, RX10, Serato, and I consistently get the best results with RipX, particularly with vocals. I only use it for stem separation, but it does a bunch of other random stuff too, the instrument morphing feature sounds horrendous. There's a good comparison review here with audio demos: www.musicradar.com/news/5-best-stem-separation-software They actually give a free browser app called Gaudio Studio the highest marks.
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Post by tkaitkai on Jan 18, 2024 11:36:48 GMT -6
For vocal/stem separation, this is the best I've tried, and it's free (limitation is one song per day IIRC): vocalremover.org/splitter-aiWould still love to try RipX, though.
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