That's not going to help you with any specific noise reduction or artifact removal of course. *īeyond that, Reaper is a fine DAW for working on anything from live sound to mixing to mastering and certainly my choice. Yes, yes, being VERY snobby with that kind of comment but this is challenging sound preservation we're talking about. The biggest issue would be with the cheapness of the USB turntable and resulting low grade transfer.
#Denoise clickrepair pro
It is a brilliant program when it comes to audio editing, much easier to use than Pro Tools. Oh yeah, absolutely, but this is a labor of love, you're going to have to spend a lot of time on this.īut Reaper is absolutely up to the task. I've also made multiple copies as a little mental security.ĭoes Reaper lend itself to the repair of something like this? I am starting the project with the worst one. I downloaded all four with a USB turntable and the files have been digitized. Then there is the condition of the acetate, lots of hiss and some crackle- this one wasn't properly stored, sadly. It comes up as a loud "click" 78 times a minute during playback. One Master- Begin the Beguine- has a crack in the disk that runs all the way across. There are simply zero copies of the album out there (been trying for years), and these are all I have to try and begin a restoration project. Is Reaper a good tool for cleaning up old 78's from the 1940s? I have just obtained the acetate masters (I think they're acetate) from the one album my mother released in 1943.