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#53104 by Andragon
Thu Jan 15, 2009 9:49 pm
haha GT, nice one.
Well, you use an audio editor the same way you use it to edit your recordings. And cut out the parts you want and save em to a separate file.
PS. I didn't make that btw. I'm just linking to it :P

#53114 by gtZip
Thu Jan 15, 2009 10:34 pm
Well I figured that much, but... a lot of em are just straight voice. Once the sound is mixed, how would you pull out just the track for, sayyyy, DLR?
Or if its a cartoon, a certain characters voice without background noise or music, etc.

#53134 by Shredd6
Fri Jan 16, 2009 1:21 am
Dude that was freaking crazy!!

When I play the whistle, my cat freaks out! Hahaha.. For some reason she really hates that sound. I've never seen anything like it from my cat. Usually she could care less about anything.

Damn man. DLR even pisses off cats. Hahaha.

#53162 by ZXYZ
Fri Jan 16, 2009 5:05 am
My guess would be that the vox are straight in the middle so you could yank them out same way as you could mute 'em for a karioke mix.

#53227 by Andragon
Fri Jan 16, 2009 7:41 pm
I think I read that DLR recorded those tracks as warm-ups, failed takes and random studio crap and then that soundboard was just "cut up" pieces of those tracks that he recorded. If you notice, some of em sounded like they fit together; like they were recorded in one take and then they were broken up in two (or more).

Bout Family Guy, the Simpsons, etc, well, the conversations are usually very clear and there's no background noises, music, or anything. The main focus is on the character's dialogue, so if you got the sound track to an episode, you can easily take out the unfunny parts and create a soundboard like that.

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