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Originally Posted by Tekker
The vocal removal programs may also use some kind of filtering or EQ in addition to flipping the polarity... But the vocal range is way to wide to zero in on just the vocals, and there are many instruments in the same frequency range as the vocals (such as guitar, keyboard, drums, etc...) so it'd be impossible to remove the vocals with EQ or filtering.
So the results of vocal removal programs will vary for each song depending on how the song was mixed.
-tkr
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Tekker is right, but i have had fairly decent results with EQing using both Auditions 30band EQ and a 31band Rack mount EQ, we also use it for feedback elimination...
ive used the same trick for making a guitar solo easier to hear in a mix to try and learn it.. by boosting the freqs where the notes are sitting, if that makes sense.
This being said, its still not as simple as "click here to remove vocals" you still get them ,just at lower volume, but if you were to record the vox track and mix it at a higher volume, the original vox would be lost underneath it.
Another option may be to try and find a backing track. If your better than me with other instruments and things, make one using
guitar pro. Then you can just lay your vox over the top of the BT... Just a though