How to get rid of bleeding on percussion instruments

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sharpdion23
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2012/02/25 17:45:29 (permalink)

How to get rid of bleeding on percussion instruments

I have set two tracks for a percussion instruments to record the left hand and right hand in its own track. I recorded them both simultaneously and it needed some timing adjustments. But when I edit the timing of the left hand, the sound of the right hand that bled through the left hand track is now making it sound as if it was double. Is there anyway to get rid of the bleed from each other?
 
Sorry if this is confusing. I can't really explain it well.

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    Jeff Evans
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    Re:How to get rid of bleeding on percussion instruments 2012/02/25 18:33:54 (permalink)
    One solution is to move both sides timing wise during the timing adjustments.

    The other is to perhaps try a downward expander on both sides. If you have close miked each side then the ratio of the drum near the mike to the bleed will be pretty high. You may with some fiddling get just the up close sound through and not let bleed through as it closed down gain wise in between hits. You need to adjust for natural sounding hits as well. eg release settings etc.

    Then you could try adding a nice tight sounding convolution drum room just to add some ambience and hide any artifcats of the downward expander nicely.



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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re:How to get rid of bleeding on percussion instruments 2012/02/25 20:13:12 (permalink)
    It will be easier to adjust the timing if you work with a single stereo track rather than a  mono track.

    Perhaps you can bounce to a stereo track and then work on that?

    best regards,
    mike




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    sharpdion23
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    Re:How to get rid of bleeding on percussion instruments 2012/02/26 19:31:30 (permalink)
    Thanks for the replies.

    @Jeff Evans. Can you explain more about the downward expander you were talking about? I don't really understand what you were trying to say.

    @Mike Mccue. I think I will try it out. I am using audiosnap to fix the timing. If I understood it correctly, I will bounce both the tracks into one stereo tracks, it should be easier to fix the timing of the drums without having to worry about the bleed from each track syncing with the original track.

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