Thanks for sharing. Just to follow-up on my own trials with UNCHIRP. I did give it a thorough demonstration. For the material I needed tamed, it did not help at all. I do not believe it suits dialogue or spoken word well, which was my primary use case. But in my search for material that would better suit UNCHIRP, I found this tutorial about Izotope RX on compressed interviews. Zynaptiq is even name-checked.noiseboyuk wrote: Fri Jun 17, 2022 9:28 amI don't think there are any.kidslow wrote: Sat May 07, 2022 9:36 pmWhich tools in RX do you use to achieve what UNCHIRP does? I'm not entirely convinced of the uniqueness vs how much of it is marketing, but I wouldn't know how to tame RX into making the fixes that UNCHIRP purports to make.MogwaiBoy wrote: Wed May 04, 2022 9:31 am I use the offline method for this kind of editing (iZotope RX) - but I'm absolutely sure Unchirp is quite advanced and quite powerful.
I just gave it a good workout. Someone came to me with 25 year old track that needed an instrumental version. First off, into Music Rebalance in RX. That was a mildy disappointing result - yes, the vocal was 98% gone, but in this case it sounded wibbly, lacked punch and various sibilances were still there.
So into UNCHIRP. I love the listen to I/O only mode, where you can really hear what it is doing. In my case, musical noise was the problem - it was all wibble. I turned that to 100%. Chirps didn't do anything, and the others tended to make things worse. But getting rid of that musical noise really helped, and I don't know how else I'd ever have done that. It wasn't magically perfect, but it was magically better.
I then put it through Kush's Clariphonic to restore a bit of high end and presence, Waves' Smack Attack to get some definition back that the Music Rebalance process lost and a bit of the L3-16 to tame things at the end. Finally back into RX to manually remove the remaining stray sibilances and clicks. The end result wouldn't be good enough for a commercial release in this case, but it's for a live show and I think it'll pass muster there.
https://www.izotope.com/en/learn/tips-t ... rview.html
It supplied some audio files and a variety of interim tests to compare at various stages. The article's description of UNCHIRP as, "specifically designed to do nothing but remove artifacts of overzealous MP3 compression" is a somewhat accurate assessment of the use cases I could hear. If I had to do batch or repeated cleanup of overly compressed music, yes. I don't, typically, but that's where I heard the best improvements applying it. Just not something I need on a sustained basis. Certainly not at that price point.
I demo'ed Soothe at the same time, and found it a different beast entirely. Obviously because it is. Better for my dialogue and spoken word use cases, but I'm also not convinced I can't get there with what tools I already have. This thread did inspire me to put together some test cases and a test plan and take a few plugins for a spin, so that is a productive outcome.
