![]() I haven't seen such a mess in years.Īnd of course the typical "Windows World" crap like modal warning windows with a message like "Do you want to show the effect of VinylStudio's filters / equalisation curves in the frequency analysis displayed (clicking No will display a frequency analysis of the 'raw' recording)?" and buttons . Hundreds of features split between menus, buttons, context menus, dropdown menus, modal slide-out sheets, floating windows, modal windows, etc., etc. (Not for me personally, but I partially work with audio for a living, so I'm not even an "average user"…) And I doubt that anyone younger than 20 even knows what that is. A floppy disc as a "Save" icon? In 2014?! Gimme a break! I haven't touched a floppy for at least 15 years now. In the meantime I have actually downloaded the Vinyl Studio demo version and played with it a bit. Frankly, it looks like a typical Windows port: butt-ugly interface and suffering from featuritis… I haven't tried it but from what I've seen in the PDF manual it's anything else but "simple". So I'm sticking with Wave Editor as long as it works. Unfortunately a year or two ago the developers have morphed Wave Editor into "Triumph" but I found its interface is quite horrible and it absolutely doesn't fit into my workflow anymore. ![]() :)įor the record: I'm using Audiofile-Engineering's Wave Editor (discontinued) to record and edit audio files. I'm using the one in Amadeus Pro.)īut we're already getting into the very advanced territory here. (For efficient use of such filters a good spectrograph is a must though. With that you can precisely filter useless low rumble below approx. Just as good and just as essential for "cleaning" up vinyl recordings is from the same developer DeNoise, in particular the also included DeNoiseLF app. Notheless, it's the best of its breed, and not only in its own price range. If you don't know how to use it, you can easily make things worse. I'd consider it in about the same league as Amadeus Lite.ĬlickRepair is amazing and excellent, but that's already quite an advanced tool. I was using Sound Studio 1 over 10 years ago since it was one of the best affordable audio editors for Mac OS 9.
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