Listener pointed out Jivetalking, which is based on this FFMPEG implementation.
I found it problematic in use, but think it is a laudable goal to build, especially if you have no intention of learning to process your own audio. People running this tool cannot be expected to understand how to properly record themselves, which is the number 1 problem with any audio recording.
Very curious on spelling out the actual settings used in order to apply them directly to Audacity, or similar, as part of recording.
What prevents all of this from being done in Audacity directly?
- Clarify each step involved in order to apply all of these values to our DAW's directly, since multitrack editing is required after this process.
- Worth sharing a project template including these settings on each track for basic normalization, noise profile, gate, EQ, limiter.
- Helps everyone make better recordings to begin with.
- This sort of information is way too difficult to find without learning yourself! Definitely a major reason that tools like this are important!
Why? Two reasons:
- Editing and mixing in a DAW is still a required step.
- Clarifying tips and expectations helps everyone to not only process their audio, but make better recordings over all (even those not using this tool themselves). Fun! Got to love FFMPEG.