Y'all:
As you may have read elsewhere, I've had a long-term project to get all the individual music cues for TAS extracted, edited, and generally processed into something that sounds decent.
I've been working on this for some time and still have a long way to go, but I thought I'd give y'all a chance to see the work in progress.
It's here, at YouTube.
It's just the first track, and it's the easiest one, which is why I threw it up there.
My next milestone is the completion of what I call "Action Cue 01" and "Action Cue 02". I'll put up a link when I'm done.
Comment, questions, or nasty remarks are invited.
For those who are interested, the process is:
Using DVD Audio Extractor (amazingly running just fine under Wine), I'm extracting the 6-channel English audio tracks from all the TAS DVDs. These are saved as .flac files.
The .flac files are then loaded into Audacity for editing. Of the six tracks, four are music-related.
Annoyingly there are also various sound effects mixed in, such as phasers and bridge sound effects. This requires that non-musical sounds be replaced with silence and an appropriate cut from another episode edited into place. That's actually the rather lengthy part.
Also lengthy is the audio processing. Unfortunately, the music cues aren't a consistent sound level, varying with the accompanying dialog tracks. The cues must be first normalized and then carefully processed to restore the original sound levels.
Once edited, the files are saved as native Audacity files and then exported to standard MP3s. EasyTag is then used to provide accurate MP3 tags and album art for the cues.
Finally, the cues are turned into videos using OpenShot Video Editor for upload to YouTube.
Dakota Smith
As you may have read elsewhere, I've had a long-term project to get all the individual music cues for TAS extracted, edited, and generally processed into something that sounds decent.
I've been working on this for some time and still have a long way to go, but I thought I'd give y'all a chance to see the work in progress.
It's here, at YouTube.
It's just the first track, and it's the easiest one, which is why I threw it up there.
My next milestone is the completion of what I call "Action Cue 01" and "Action Cue 02". I'll put up a link when I'm done.
Comment, questions, or nasty remarks are invited.
For those who are interested, the process is:
Using DVD Audio Extractor (amazingly running just fine under Wine), I'm extracting the 6-channel English audio tracks from all the TAS DVDs. These are saved as .flac files.
The .flac files are then loaded into Audacity for editing. Of the six tracks, four are music-related.
Annoyingly there are also various sound effects mixed in, such as phasers and bridge sound effects. This requires that non-musical sounds be replaced with silence and an appropriate cut from another episode edited into place. That's actually the rather lengthy part.
Also lengthy is the audio processing. Unfortunately, the music cues aren't a consistent sound level, varying with the accompanying dialog tracks. The cues must be first normalized and then carefully processed to restore the original sound levels.
Once edited, the files are saved as native Audacity files and then exported to standard MP3s. EasyTag is then used to provide accurate MP3 tags and album art for the cues.
Finally, the cues are turned into videos using OpenShot Video Editor for upload to YouTube.
Dakota Smith