I'd need to know more. Are you using a DI box or something to plug your guitar INTO your laptop for recording? Are you using an amp simulator or recording dry? Is the noise ONLY when you are not playing?
@@HomebrewAudioRecording not doing any music. just in my backyard or nearby woods recording "nature sounds" mostly birds and sometimes VERY GENTLE rain. HATE hiss! Thought I was investing the best gear for this... especially the 32 bit float and low noise that the Sound Devices MixPre 3 ii has to offer. And it is much better than the h4n I was using. But still hiss and birds seem to be at the same level. Going to do more testing. And wondering if there is a better solution for me than reaper which may be overkill for me.
@@kiterway3592 Yes, Reaper might be more than you need since you aren't recording music. You could try Audacity, which is is free. It has a standard noise reduction effect. But I have recently started using a plugin from Accusonus called Noise Remover that allows you to dial in NR without having to sample anything. It's literally a large knob on the screen that you turn until it sounds right. Check it out here: accusonus.com/store?a=119385&c=15 You can use it as a plugin with Audacity, which is free recording software. Hope that helps!
This works really well, I tend to reduce the overall "gain" of the captured noise as to not effect the audio as much, or better yet and my ultimate method is to use automation so that the noise reduction is applied almost like a compressor. At the quiet parts its heavily used, and when your talking the noise reduction backs off. Best of both worlds and something Reaper can do. I made a video on that but I think it had like 100 views lol vs your nearly 200K
Amazing! It really helped me! I was close to buy a microphone for a few hundreds just to reduce the noise! NVIDIA Noise Reduction seems to work good but cuts off my voice sometimes and some background that I want to keep. But this ReaFir is just great! No more fans and spinning hdds in the audio! Thanks!
You're welcome! Yeah, the cutting off thing is something called a "gate," which is not really noise reduction, per se. It just filters out noise when you're NOT talking but it's still there when you are talking. ReaFir is a more traditional type of noise reduction where it removes it all the time - talking and not talking. So there is no chance of getting cut off when the gate closes too soon or opens too late.
This was a PERFECT solution for my hiss issues ! It just removes it completely, the Toggle sectioning is just what you need to sample the noise. The result is amazing ! I'm new to using Reaper and was utilizing ReaGate but that only works for background noise when no instrument is being played, this solution however works flawlessly. The step by step walkthrough the process is very clear ! Thanks !
1:41 (yeah, I'm late to this game) but you need to be sure you are selecting ONLY noise and not any bumps or anything. iow, the sound should remain the same throughout the loop. then you know it's just noise you're sampling. :) clear video! I used this a few times just to rid myself of that 60 cycle crap in a guitar track. If it's full on loud all the time, well, maybe you can live with it. Like old VH albums.
I think these videos are fantastic. Funny and informative. Such a relief from those videos which tear through the subject without showing you carefully, what, when and where. Thanks so much.
Home Brew Audio Sorry, didn't mean to bombard you. I'm just not used to YT creators actually responding. I left comments as a thank you, but also for others who may be new to the video - rather than a nag to have you respond. Lol.
As someone only used to Audacity and just starting out with Reaper and overwhelmed by all the options in it, this was extremely helpful. Thank you so much man.
That's awesome! So glad you liked it. My main goal is to TRY to teach these things for folks who might feel overwhelmed with the ridiculously (needlessly) confusing jargon.
Wow, hidden for real. Great tutorial though, this saved me from having to manually apply noise reduction to the original recording before cutting in REAPER. Thank you so much!
Thanks but at first I could´nt make the time selection work, it took a while to find out I had it locked, by clicking on the L key I got it working again. Thanks again for the tutorial, it´s awsome
AWESOME tutorial AND -- at least in my case -- Home Brew gave a very prompt reply to a question left in the comments! Thanks HomeBrewAudio. Keep up the great service you're providing the audio creation / editing community! :-)
Just b.s.-ing on the net and i ran into several videos on TH-cam, the same exact subject and same product. What's different about yours is you focus on relaying information to the newbie - Very good, most likely you are trained in educating ;)
Thank you for this simple step-by-step tutorial! You have changed yet another DAW-user's world and will now use this method from now on to record my vox. Thanks and cheers!
Thanks Gary! Now to your issue. 1st, you should remove the mixer from the equation. Plug headphones into the UCA and remove the plugs from the Output jacks. Make sure the "Automatically build noise profile" box is checked and that you ONLY have noise highlighted in your audio. Also make sure Toggle Repeat is on.Then make sure you select "Subtract" in the Mode window. Now try the process again. Did it work this time? If so (and if your settings were correct),the mixer caused the problem.
darktendency - all noise-reduction FX will have that muffled or swirly artifact IF there is too much noise to remove. The only real way to fix that is to try and NOT have the noise in the recording in the first place. But also double-check that when you sampled the noise, you ONLY selected a section without any voice in it. That's why I set a repeating loop of JUST the noise when I have the check mark in the "Automatically Build Noise Profile" box in the effect. Then uncheck that box and play.
Before clicking "automatically build noise profile" it's best to lower the number at the bottom right of the graph from -90 to something like -140. This makes it so that there's no flat lines at the bottom of the graph in the noise profile caused by it not being able to go lower than -90. This makes it more accurate and sound way better.
Yeah, that's wild - 8 years. But it still works the same even with the latest version of Reaper. So no real need to swap out the video yet. Really glad it helped you!
I'nm more of a visual guy, but now i do voice recording for a website.....this was straight to the point..some humor...and it got the job done..this is the way a tutorial should be...tnx
There are two prices - both for the exact same software! They have an honor system. You can buy it for $60 until you start making $20 per year using it. At that point, they expect you to pat $225 for the commercial license. I know of no other company that does this.
I applaud you on your extremely clear and helpful video with a touch of humor to keep us entertained, why can't all videos be like this? THANK YOU kind sir :)
I was sceptical but this little plugin is amazing. I thought it'd just cut out a massive portion of my track via extremely selective EQing (which I guess is probably what it basically does), but I assumed it would make my track sound terrible (cutting out a load of top end where the 'hiss' was, for instance). In fact, all it seems to work on is the hiss. It's genius!
Excellent. I like the way you draw a red box around where the mouse is going. A lot of videos simply flash the mouse all around the screen which makes it difficult to follow what's going on.
Thanks for this; I struggled for a couple of hours using Reaper User Guide and failed to find this solution - But using this video I got rid of clicks and background noise within a few minutes!
You're welcome! I have updated the course for 2020 and V6 of Reaper. And this lesson is still the same since yes, the effect still works exactly the same as in the video.
Just downloaded reaper today, and I’m going to try when I get around to it. (Taking a break from audacity). I think noise reduction and reverb are like the only two things I used from that program. I hope I get the hang of this one.
I'd like to record vocals, acoustic guitar to start. I have a RODE condensor mic for vocals and Sennheiser to mic my guitar. I have M-Audio Fast Track Ultra as my IA. problem - my recorded audio is not loud enough on playback. I have to crank the volume on the IA all the way, even half way is still low. I use Rockit 5 monitors and those are turned up all the way. Question - do I need a preamp perhaps or could this be an internal setting? In the pc itself.. control panel-sounds.. recording is turned up all the way also.
YakMan NC an important distinction - "loud enough" vs "enough signal getting recorded." Probably the best way to determine it is how big the wave form is in its track. If it takes up a sufficient amount of space - Not so much such that so any of it exceeds the boundaries of the tracks, but enough that it isn't all contained too close to the center. If you DO have enough signal, then it's an OUTPUT issue, which might be a monitoring issue - not enough signal either going to them or coming form them (though since you say they're turned up all the way, probably it is not that). If it is an INPUT issue - a problem of not getting enough signal recorded - then it is either your interface (the Fast Track) or something between the FT and Reaper, which could be the Windows Audio Devices properties (assuming you use Windows). Check your Recording device Input Level in Windows first. If it shows 100%, then just turn the recording gain all the way up on the FT. If that overloads things (which I'd expect it to), just turn int down little by little. You may well find that you need to have the FT gain always between 80-95% up, with very small adjustments in that range making large changes in gain. I've seen that before with other interface units like the FT. Hope that helps. Cheers!
@@HomebrewAudioRecording 😊 You were my saviour, after half an hour of forgetting to unselect the "automatic" section 🙃. I don't suppose you have come across echoing of sound when trying to record, have you? I can't stop it happening. I've got a yeti mic, and when I go to record, there's always an echo of late. Just thought I'd ask. Thanks again, and happy Monday 🙏🏻🌟
@@LisaLula432 That is probably the "Record Monitoring" being turned on. For some reason, Reaper has this on by default. You should turn it off and see if that fixes the echo. In the track control panel next to the red Record button (on the track, NOT the Master), you'll see a littl icon that looks like a speaker. Hover over that and you'll probably see that it says "RECORD MONITORING: ON." Cick the speaker icon twice and it will turn that off (clicking once takes it to "Auto" which you also don't want). See if that does the trick.
Thanks dude! I'm recording my violin and my voice with a BEHRINGER B2-PRO in reaper and that thing is very annoying...but now...because of you is gone. So... Thanks so much!!!
+Home Brew Audio What's your opinion about the Behringer B2-PRO Condenser Microphone? I got it for a couple months ago for 300$ with interface, a lot of cables, tripod...etc... Everything new...that got at almost 300$... It's a good professional gear? I'm still amazed about the recording quality of voice and violin... What's your opinion? :)
+GAME VIC - Minecraft PE I don't have any personal experience with the mic. However, I can tell you that it got good reviews from Sound-On-Sound. Large Diaphragm mics like this one are typically good for both voice and acoustic instruments like violin. So yeah. I'm not surprised you got great sound!
wow. thanks for the reply. my sincere apologies for not getting back to you quicker. It was kind of you to respond (and so quickly). Honestly I have been so crazy busy this week I haven't tried any more recording but will keep you posted as to your proposed solution. Again thanks so much
Wow a TH-cam tutorial that's clear, concise, well-edited, well-paced, and helpful. I can't say I expected to ever find such a thing. Thank you!
You're welcome! And thanks so much for your kind words 😃!
I'd need to know more. Are you using a DI box or something to plug your guitar INTO your laptop for recording? Are you using an amp simulator or recording dry? Is the noise ONLY when you are not playing?
@@HomebrewAudioRecording not doing any music. just in my backyard or nearby woods recording "nature sounds" mostly birds and sometimes VERY GENTLE rain. HATE hiss! Thought I was investing the best gear for this... especially the 32 bit float and low noise that the Sound Devices MixPre 3 ii has to offer. And it is much better than the h4n I was using. But still hiss and birds seem to be at the same level. Going to do more testing. And wondering if there is a better solution for me than reaper which may be overkill for me.
@@kiterway3592 Yes, Reaper might be more than you need since you aren't recording music. You could try Audacity, which is is free. It has a standard noise reduction effect. But I have recently started using a plugin from Accusonus called Noise Remover that allows you to dial in NR without having to sample anything. It's literally a large knob on the screen that you turn until it sounds right. Check it out here: accusonus.com/store?a=119385&c=15 You can use it as a plugin with Audacity, which is free recording software. Hope that helps!
@@HomebrewAudioRecording Thanks a bunch! Will try it and compare...
This works really well, I tend to reduce the overall "gain" of the captured noise as to not effect the audio as much, or better yet and my ultimate method is to use automation so that the noise reduction is applied almost like a compressor. At the quiet parts its heavily used, and when your talking the noise reduction backs off. Best of both worlds and something Reaper can do. I made a video on that but I think it had like 100 views lol vs your nearly 200K
i am always turning off my central air to record and this totally eliminates it from my videos effortlessly! im never going to sweat again!
Finding this in 2019, still amazingly helpful! The humor complimented the easy to follow tutorial great job!
Thanks! The course is still current too. though I plan updates later this year.
12 YEARS and this tutorial still Great!!! thanksss, working in Reaper 3,75, NICE
You're welcome! Yeah I'm glad the core functions still work the same! Saves me a lot of time not having to update :-P. And I'm glad it helped!
Amazing! It really helped me! I was close to buy a microphone for a few hundreds just to reduce the noise! NVIDIA Noise Reduction seems to work good but cuts off my voice sometimes and some background that I want to keep. But this ReaFir is just great! No more fans and spinning hdds in the audio! Thanks!
You're welcome! Yeah, the cutting off thing is something called a "gate," which is not really noise reduction, per se. It just filters out noise when you're NOT talking but it's still there when you are talking. ReaFir is a more traditional type of noise reduction where it removes it all the time - talking and not talking. So there is no chance of getting cut off when the gate closes too soon or opens too late.
This was a PERFECT solution for my hiss issues ! It just removes it completely, the Toggle sectioning is just what you need to sample the noise. The result is amazing ! I'm new to using Reaper and was utilizing ReaGate but that only works for background noise when no instrument is being played, this solution however works flawlessly. The step by step walkthrough the process is very clear ! Thanks !
Awesome! so glad it was helpful for you. Sorry for the delay. I just found several comments I had not replied to. Not sure how that happened.
1:41 (yeah, I'm late to this game) but you need to be sure you are selecting ONLY noise and not any bumps or anything. iow, the sound should remain the same throughout the loop. then you know it's just noise you're sampling. :) clear video! I used this a few times just to rid myself of that 60 cycle crap in a guitar track. If it's full on loud all the time, well, maybe you can live with it. Like old VH albums.
OH MY GOD MAN THANK YOU MUCH
i couldn't apply this effect without completely screwing up my sound and voice, but you explained this perfectly! thanks!
+Seven Sins You're welcome! I'm so glad it helped:).
Still helping over 10 years later!
Awesome!
I think these videos are fantastic. Funny and informative. Such a relief from those videos which tear through the subject without showing you carefully, what, when and where. Thanks so much.
You're welcome! Again, I appreciate your feedback!
Home Brew Audio Sorry, didn't mean to bombard you. I'm just not used to YT creators actually responding. I left comments as a thank you, but also for others who may be new to the video - rather than a nag to have you respond. Lol.
😀
Do you mind if I use one of your comments on my website?
Thanks Greg!
As someone only used to Audacity and just starting out with Reaper and overwhelmed by all the options in it, this was extremely helpful. Thank you so much man.
That's awesome! So glad you liked it. My main goal is to TRY to teach these things for folks who might feel overwhelmed with the ridiculously (needlessly) confusing jargon.
Very straightforward and easy to understand.
Thanks! That's what I aim for.
Wow, hidden for real. Great tutorial though, this saved me from having to manually apply noise reduction to the original recording before cutting in REAPER. Thank you so much!
You're welcome! so glad it helped.
Thanks but at first I could´nt make the time selection work, it took a while to find out I had it locked, by clicking on the L key I got it working again. Thanks again for the tutorial, it´s awsome
Glad you figured it out!
The best time investment of my day. Thanks Home Brew Audio!
You're welcome!
im currently studying game design, and this just increased my audio in under 4 minutes, tyvm dude :D
Excellent! You're welcome 🙂
AWESOME tutorial AND -- at least in my case -- Home Brew gave a very prompt reply to a question left in the comments! Thanks HomeBrewAudio. Keep up the great service you're providing the audio creation / editing community! :-)
You're welcome. And thanks for your kind words!!
thanks a whole lotta bunch there fella me and the boys will be playing...aaaaalllll niiightt.
What a fantastic bit of wizardry! Thanks for the video- helped me get rid of an obnoxious noise in a live recording. 👏👏👏
Excellent! so glad it was helpful.
Just b.s.-ing on the net and i ran into several videos on TH-cam, the same exact subject and same product. What's different about yours is you focus on relaying information to the newbie - Very good, most likely you are trained in educating ;)
this is amazing. will be adding to post for every video i make. I cant believe this solved the issue so well!!!
Awesome! So glad it helped.
this saved my life! thanks so much for this tutorial!
Wow. I'm so glad it helped you that much:). You're very welcome!
Home Brew Audio My recordings sound brilliant now, thank you!
That's so awesome! I'm glad I could help!
Thank you for this simple step-by-step tutorial! You have changed yet another DAW-user's world and will now use this method from now on to record my vox. Thanks and cheers!
You're welcome! So glad you found it helpful!!
I've forgotten about this video (it already had my like) and it saved me again hahaha
Nice tip
Ha! So glad it was here for you when you needed it again!😆
Thanks Gary! Now to your issue. 1st, you should remove the mixer from the equation. Plug headphones into the UCA and remove the plugs from the Output jacks. Make sure the "Automatically build noise profile" box is checked and that you ONLY have noise highlighted in your audio. Also make sure Toggle Repeat is on.Then make sure you select "Subtract" in the Mode window. Now try the process again. Did it work this time? If so (and if your settings were correct),the mixer caused the problem.
darktendency - all noise-reduction FX will have that muffled or swirly artifact IF there is too much noise to remove. The only real way to fix that is to try and NOT have the noise in the recording in the first place. But also double-check that when you sampled the noise, you ONLY selected a section without any voice in it. That's why I set a repeating loop of JUST the noise when I have the check mark in the "Automatically Build Noise Profile" box in the effect. Then uncheck that box and play.
Why did your voice over for this video have noise when it is a video about getting rid of the exact thing you are suffering from lol.
@@XenoTravis Well there had to be noise to demonstrate how to get rid of it. I assume the "example" noise is what you were talking about.
Before clicking "automatically build noise profile" it's best to lower the number at the bottom right of the graph from -90 to something like -140. This makes it so that there's no flat lines at the bottom of the graph in the noise profile caused by it not being able to go lower than -90. This makes it more accurate and sound way better.
Thanks for the tip!
it has been 8 years since you made this video, thank you very much, My guitar sounds beautiful now
Yeah, that's wild - 8 years. But it still works the same even with the latest version of Reaper. So no real need to swap out the video yet. Really glad it helped you!
Thank you. Literally just what I was looking for. Cheers.
Awesome Corey! So glad I could help:).
Such a simple thing that makes the audio sound 100x better! Thanks for a great and easy to understand tutorial!
Thanks Austin. Glad it was helpful!
I'nm more of a visual guy, but now i do voice recording for a website.....this was straight to the point..some humor...and it got the job done..this is the way a tutorial should be...tnx
Terrific feedback, Mingaul. Thanks so much for that!
I can't thank you enaugh 😍😍
You just saved my nerves, the computer fan was driving me crazy
So glad it helped!!
Best video ever! Thank you! Omg
Wow, thanks! So glad it was helpful.
There are two prices - both for the exact same software! They have an honor system. You can buy it for $60 until you start making $20 per year using it. At that point, they expect you to pat $225 for the commercial license. I know of no other company that does this.
Aaaaah...genius!!! thank you so much for this! Straight to the point!
You're welcome! And I'm glad that getting straight to the point is valuable to you. I do my best to make that happen.
Simple and useful tutorial. Works completelly good.
Awesome! Glad to hear it!
Dude I didn't even come here for the snap and select thing but that helped me soooo much thank you
Chris - You're welcome! So glad it helped. Maybe I should do a video just on the snap thing:-P.
I applaud you on your extremely clear and helpful video with a touch of humor to keep us entertained, why can't all videos be like this? THANK YOU kind sir :)
Thanks Sophie!
Awesome. Love tuts that cut to the chase, no bullshat.
Thanks! That is one of my goals. I don't want to waste people's time.
Fantastic! Thank you so much for this!
You're welcome!
Simple yet very helpful tip!
You saved my recording. Thank you!!!
You're welcome! So glad it was helpful.
Thanks for that awesome comment! That is exactly what I'm trying to do, so it's great to get feedback like that. I have done a lot of teaching, yes.
This was honestly incredibly helpful. Thank you so much!
Awesome! So glad it was helpful.
Lovely, thank you so much!
Thanks, and you're welcome😀
THANKS SO MUCH i got a chaep mic of amazon and it sounded like shit because of all of the white noise with this it now sounds great!
You're welcome. glad it helped!
I was sceptical but this little plugin is amazing. I thought it'd just cut out a massive portion of my track via extremely selective EQing (which I guess is probably what it basically does), but I assumed it would make my track sound terrible (cutting out a load of top end where the 'hiss' was, for instance). In fact, all it seems to work on is the hiss. It's genius!
That's great Jon! I'm glad it worked well for you.
Home Brew Audio Thanks for the tutorial! Have subscribed! :-)
That is incredibly fucking powerful, and that's an understatement.
Damn dude, thanks for your help, finally a video that explains everything and isn't 20 minutes long !
You're welcome! That is one of my goals - to NOT waste people's time with a video. So glad this was helpful!
@@HomebrewAudioRecording best of luck bud, keep up the good work !
@@zigamezan7837 Thanks!
MINDBLOWN!! THANK YOU
You're welcome!
Excellent. I like the way you draw a red box around where the mouse is going. A lot of videos simply flash the mouse all around the screen which makes it difficult to follow what's going on.
Thanks Alan! Glad that was helpful - good to know 😀.
it worked! thanks for saving so much of my time!
Awesome! And you're welcome!
thank you for this! helps a lot!
You're welcome!
Thanks for this; I struggled for a couple of hours using Reaper User Guide and failed to find this solution - But using this video I got rid of clicks and background noise within a few minutes!
That's awesome! So glad the video was such a help to you 😀
U saved from buying denoise plugins😁 thank you so much!
You're welcome!
thank you my bro it helped a lot
You're welcome. Glad it helped!
Sir, thank you. You've just made the world a better place.
+BriceCatherin Wow, thanks! I'm so glad you found it helpful:).
Very helpful,thank you 🥹!
You're welcome!
It works!! You, sir, are a superstar.
Aw shucks:-). Thanks! So glad it worked well for you.
Thank you so much!!!
You're welcome!
Thank you, dude! This video was very helpful.
You're welcome! Glad it helped 😀.
Thank you very much! I just bought a cheap mic. It had a lot of noise, but now it's a clear voice!! Me so happy :-) Thanx!
You're welcome, Charly. Glad it helped!
God send. Thank you. This is still valid in 2020, UI didn't changed much since then.
You're welcome! I have updated the course for 2020 and V6 of Reaper. And this lesson is still the same since yes, the effect still works exactly the same as in the video.
finally someone who knows what they are talking about, cheers
Thanks Antonio!
Just downloaded reaper today, and I’m going to try when I get around to it. (Taking a break from audacity). I think noise reduction and reverb are like the only two things I used from that program. I hope I get the hang of this one.
I'm sure you can get the hang of it! Good choice.
This was great! straightforward, quick, and very helpful. thanks!
Thanks! That's exactly what I was going for. so glad you found it helpful.
great one man nothing else really worked for me your tutorial did, thanks for that.
Awesome! So glad it helped 😀.
Amazing tutorial, was surprised by how instant the effect was
Thanks Yung!
I had *no* idea that this was in reaper. This is 2020 we're speaking of. Thank you!
Yes. Reaper is an amazing program for audio recording.
That helped out tremendously!!!! Thanx A lot
Nice tutorial, and not longwinded. Thank you.
Awesome! New to home recording and just downloaded Reaper 3 weeks now.. Lots to learn. Thanks for the tuts. Keep them coming! Subscribed!
So glad you like them! And I plan to:). Happy Holidays!
I'd like to record vocals, acoustic guitar to start. I have a RODE condensor mic for vocals and Sennheiser to mic my guitar. I have M-Audio Fast Track Ultra as my IA.
problem - my recorded audio is not loud enough on playback. I have to crank the volume on the IA all the way, even half way is still low. I use Rockit 5 monitors and those are turned up all the way.
Question - do I need a preamp perhaps or could this be an internal setting?
In the pc itself.. control panel-sounds.. recording is turned up all the way also.
YakMan NC an important distinction - "loud enough" vs "enough signal getting recorded." Probably the best way to determine it is how big the wave form is in its track. If it takes up a sufficient amount of space - Not so much such that so any of it exceeds the boundaries of the tracks, but enough that it isn't all contained too close to the center. If you DO have enough signal, then it's an OUTPUT issue, which might be a monitoring issue - not enough signal either going to them or coming form them (though since you say they're turned up all the way, probably it is not that). If it is an INPUT issue - a problem of not getting enough signal recorded - then it is either your interface (the Fast Track) or something between the FT and Reaper, which could be the Windows Audio Devices properties (assuming you use Windows). Check your Recording device Input Level in Windows first. If it shows 100%, then just turn the recording gain all the way up on the FT. If that overloads things (which I'd expect it to), just turn int down little by little. You may well find that you need to have the FT gain always between 80-95% up, with very small adjustments in that range making large changes in gain. I've seen that before with other interface units like the FT. Hope that helps. Cheers!
I love you... Reaper King 🙌🏻🌟
Well thank you! 🙂
@@HomebrewAudioRecording
😊 You were my saviour, after half an hour of forgetting to unselect the "automatic" section 🙃.
I don't suppose you have come across echoing of sound when trying to record, have you?
I can't stop it happening. I've got a yeti mic, and when I go to record, there's always an echo of late.
Just thought I'd ask.
Thanks again, and happy Monday 🙏🏻🌟
@@LisaLula432 That is probably the "Record Monitoring" being turned on. For some reason, Reaper has this on by default. You should turn it off and see if that fixes the echo. In the track control panel next to the red Record button (on the track, NOT the Master), you'll see a littl icon that looks like a speaker. Hover over that and you'll probably see that it says "RECORD MONITORING: ON." Cick the speaker icon twice and it will turn that off (clicking once takes it to "Auto" which you also don't want). See if that does the trick.
@@HomebrewAudioRecording wow, thanks so much. I'll try it, and let you know how it goes 🙏🏻🌟
Great vid. Right to the point. No meaningless jargon I’m a new subscriber. Thanks
Thanks Vic!
Sir, I OWE YOU ONE. Thank you. Subscribing as a means of rewarding your help, you saved our recording from disgrace.
Wow! Well thanks. So happy it was helpful to you!
Wow, really thank you a lot, this is probablye the best youtube tutorial I've ever watched
You're welcome! And thanks so much for that comment. It means a lot 😀.
What a plugin! Cleans up your vocals a lot!
Yup. And it's part of the collection of plugins that comes with Reaper. Sort of built right in.
Man, I never comment on anything, but this is so useful and awesome. Thank you!
I'm honored 😀. Thanks!
Your videos are extremely helpful. Thank you !
I was looking for something like this. THANK YOU!! :)
Glad I could help!
Thanks dude! I'm recording my violin and my voice with a BEHRINGER B2-PRO in reaper and that thing is very annoying...but now...because of you is gone. So... Thanks so much!!!
+GAME VIC - Minecraft PE You're welcome! So glad I could be of assistance:).
+Home Brew Audio You got one more subscriber :D good job.
+Home Brew Audio What's your opinion about the Behringer B2-PRO Condenser Microphone? I got it for a couple months ago for 300$ with interface, a lot of cables, tripod...etc... Everything new...that got at almost 300$... It's a good professional gear? I'm still amazed about the recording quality of voice and violin... What's your opinion? :)
+GAME VIC - Minecraft PE I don't have any personal experience with the mic. However, I can tell you that it got good reviews from Sound-On-Sound. Large Diaphragm mics like this one are typically good for both voice and acoustic instruments like violin. So yeah. I'm not surprised you got great sound!
+GAME VIC - Minecraft PE Thanks!!
Thank you very much!
You're welcome!
I`ve been looking for this, thanks a lot buddy!
+Mavs Noche You're welcome!
you just saved me work time ..i was exporting to audacity then back to reaper lol...awesome video.
Thanks Jezz! glad it helped:).
this is for sure the best. video. on youtube
thank you very much
Wow! Well, maybe not THE best :-). But I'm so glad it helped. Thanks!
Thank you so freaking much man!! I get a buzzing sound in my vocal recording.. Looks like it got rid of the noise! Thank you!
Yay! So glad it was helpful.
Great little tutorial. Informative and fun. Thanks
You're welcome, Peter! Glad you liked it.
Yes thank you so much.!!!
You're welcome!
wow. thanks for the reply. my sincere apologies for not getting back to you quicker. It was kind of you to respond (and so quickly). Honestly I have been so crazy busy this week I haven't tried any more recording but will keep you posted as to your proposed solution. Again thanks so much
Your voice is magnificent! I came to learn more but I knew this already.... Soooo... Nice voice!
Well, thank you for that! :-).
Your are Amazing bro... Thanks for this amazing tip... 🥰
You're welcome! 😀
Thanks for the video, dude! Helped me out a ton!
You're welcome. Glad it helped!
Thanks for this! Exactly what I'm looking for.
Patrick Bilog You're welcome Patrick! So glad it helped:).
Great job man. Perfect video
Thanks!
Nice👍
Thanks!
This is Insane Lol subbed
Wooooohuu it works truly a life saver
Yay! So glad it worked for you!
Awesome,seems to be a few video's in the market now dealing with Reaper,good luck yours,might have to invest.....then again,maybe I could do my own.
Thank you so so much, this has been very helpful! :)
You're welcome!