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#Vocal voice remover pro full
The idea is still to get the INSTRUMENTAL out of the full song and NOT the acapella or whatever comes out in my case. Please help me with an advice on what i might be doing wrong here. My brain is exploding and I cant help it. I even tried to work with the audio that David has provided, but wasn't even close to what he achieved.
![vocal voice remover pro vocal voice remover pro](https://www.demixer.com/media/wysiwyg_images/scrn01_sepaudiotrks.png)
I noticed that different tracks might differ in results. I guess it has the same frequencies, levels in it, so it should work. Well its still the same voice and its supposed to remove AT LEAST like. Now no matter what I do i cant get the center vocals cut out of my original song by using the acapella I just got from doing these steps. Then I use two exactly set equalizers for the both tracks to cut off low frequencies, which results in giving me less artifacts on that (put them before the gain plug, meaning in position one). As a result I receive MONOPHONIC VOCALS coming out (i beleive those are vocals that were panned off the center in the original song, like backgrounds and reverbs) with little artifacts (dirt) in it. Next I take one of the two channels and put a "gain"(stereo) plugin on it in the second position (there are two - mono and stereo versions of the plug, I believe it has to be stereo as far as my original song is) and invert its phase. And so I have two exact separate stereo audio tracks, each representing its own "left" and "right", sitting there for me. Then I create a copy of this track and copy my stereo audio file (song) into it, changing its properties to "right" channel. I create one stereo audio track in Apple Logic 8, and put a stereo audio file in it (instrumental+acapella all together, a regular song), setting the track properties as "left" channel as described above. I really tried hard and even spoke to all my musician friends that could help and its all helpless. But now cant achieve the same result by using these described techniques, no matter what i do. Hello! I've spent some time before i found this topic on taking out the acapella out from a track by using the exact phase-inverted instrumental. Once again, depending on your original track, your mileage will vary. Now it becomes very obvious that you don't just have vocals, but also a lot of the other material. In the situation you discuss, you're left with only that material.
![vocal voice remover pro vocal voice remover pro](https://img.youtube.com/vi/11bMVv_gL3A/hqdefault.jpg)
That makes the technique pretty efficient. The only obvious thing is that the vocals are gone. Same is true for guitars or anything panned center in your mix. You may have lost the snare, but all of the reverb of the snare is still here, all the bass frequencies from the snare are still here. usually you'll notice the track sounds different than the original, but it's not obvious what happened. So you take the vocals away, but also probably the snare, maybe some guitar, etc. Now in the first situation, you take that material away. With the technique I used, what you're really doing is isolating all the material that is panned dead-center, above a certain frequency range.
![vocal voice remover pro vocal voice remover pro](https://www.videoconverterfactory.com/tips/imgs-self/remove-vocals-from-songs/remove-vocals-from-songs-2.jpg)
Yes, but your results will be less than perfect. Does that mean if you bounce the vocaless version and then invert it against the original.you can then strip the music and keep the vocal ?