Seperating video and music

G

Guest

I have a home DVD of a church sermon that I would like to seperate the audio
from the video. What I would like to do is to take the music and burn it
onto a CD so I can play it in the car. Can this be done?
 
T

theplectrum

mcclanechap said:
I have a home DVD of a church sermon that I would like to seperate the
audio
from the video. What I would like to do is to take the music and burn it
onto a CD so I can play it in the car. Can this be done?
Yes, but only if the sound and music were recorded separately as two
different souces.... probably not.

If they were recorded onto one soundtrack, then you will need to transform
the soundtrack into a wave file and use a sophisticated sound file editor
(such as Wavelab to name but one) with an EQ plugin to edit out certain
frequencies that pertain to speech. Or you could find some freeware Karoake
software that may do the trick. Whatever, good luck !

Cheers,
Jerry
 
G

Guest

Is there a software that I can use when I record on the camcorder that
seperates the audio and the video. You see the camcorder is hooked directly
to the PC and then burns the DVD's
 
T

theplectrum

mcclanechap said:
Is there a software that I can use when I record on the camcorder that
seperates the audio and the video. You see the camcorder is hooked
directly
to the PC and then burns the DVD's
No, you still need need two input audio sources.

My suggestion would to be to use a tape deck or some sort of separate sound
recording device to record the music. Then transfer the it to your PC via
the line-in plug of your PC's soundcard, using Audacity (its free) :

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

You can record either as one large wave file or chop it up into smaller
files then burn it/them to CD.

Cheers,
Jerry
 
I

insert your name here

http://www.castudio.org/dvdaudioextractor/
No, you still need need two input audio sources.

My suggestion would to be to use a tape deck or some sort of separate sound
recording device to record the music. Then transfer the it to your PC via
the line-in plug of your PC's soundcard, using Audacity (its free) :

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

You can record either as one large wave file or chop it up into smaller
files then burn it/them to CD.

Cheers,
Jerry
 

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