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Re: [ARSCLIST] Restoration of broken records...



Hi Graham:

Finally had a chance to listen to both MP3 files. One man's opinion here, but the de-thumping was too radical to my ears. It creates annoying gaps in the music and makes the surface noise that's left pump so it's actually more noticeable. Did you try a notch filter at the loudest frequency of the thumps? I'd bet there's not much necessary music content down that low in the bandwidth of a tight notch. That might make the thumps less noticeable than the gaps and pumping are with the thumps removed.

That said, it's pretty amazing you were able to paste that thing back together and play it. The little ditty isn't half bad either.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Graham Newton" <gn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 10:16 PM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Restoration of broken records...



There has recently been some discussions of repairing a broken or cracked record. Everyone seems to have their own pet solution to the problem of making the record play again, some come close, but none provides a fully restored result.

For some time, I have been intending to post an example of using CEDAR processes to restore a broken record and here it is.

This one is seriously cracked, but the process for a fully broken disc is essentially the same... get it into a playable condition and use computerized de-click and de-thump processes.

The source disc is a 10" American Record Corporation No. E 587 issued around
1930, for theater use.

Love, You Funny Thing! - Imperial Dance Orchestra

See label photo here: http://www.audio-restoration.com/CIMG4743t.jpg

It was recorded at 33-1/3 rpm, transcription style inside start, with the same
tune on each side.  The disc has a large 1/2 moon crack in it with one end
still intact, but hold it up to light and you can see light through the
separated end!

See surface crack here: http://www.audio-restoration.com/CIMG4746t.jpg

See entire crack here: http://www.audio-restoration.com/CIMG4747t.jpg


Reasoning was, they were played by the projectionist to synchronize with showing of a silent film. Being shellac discs, and with the heavy weight of the pickups and steel needles, the discs wore out very fast. As one side became noisy, the projectionist would order a new disc and start using the remaining good side.

One pass used CEDAR de-clickle to remove the leading impulse clicks.
The remaining thumps were removed using CEDAR de-thump installed on SADiE 5
workstation.

The two audio files can be lined up to see there is no timeline discontinuity
as there would otherwise be with conventional physical editing.

Here is the de-clicked file prior to de-thump being done:- http://www.audio-restoration.com/arc-e587-thumps.mp3

Here is the finished de-thumped file:-
http://www.audio-restoration.com/arc-e587-dethump.mp3



... Graham Newton

--
Audio Restoration by Graham Newton, http://www.audio-restoration.com
World class professional services applied to tape or phonograph records for
consumers and re-releases, featuring CEDAR's CAMBRIDGE processes.



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