
Originally posted by eladanelf:Yes! It was on that page indeed
Originally posted by eladanelf:Yeah it's like 5 songs per month now. I've taken a subscription for this month to see if it works for backing tracks for guitar. So far I'm mildly satisfied. You can still miss a lot of depth in a song when you dial the 'other' sound away.
Vocals are clear and the drums and bass are more present than on other known backing tracks that are based on live songs
Originally posted by eladanelf:Saw this passing on facebook again (thanks Sergio) Did anyone use this website for creating (guitar) backing tracks? And which options for substraction did you use?
Originally posted by LikeASong:[..]
Yeah I know, separation of guitar isn't the best because it also includes piano and all other frequencies which aren't drums, bass or vocals - and that's a lot of frequencies! It's still nice thoughHow much is that monthly subscription, out of curiosity?
Originally posted by eladanelf:[..]
Its 4 dollars. I think I'll take it for a month and transform my favorite songs into backing tracks. Especially from the last albums and tours of which there are not many backing track available.
Originally posted by melon51:[..]
If sound quality is a thing, go with Moises.ai (and pay or use new email adresses) or install the Deezer Spleeter app. That's the original AI-project that moises and other services use. It is pretty decent, but a separated vocal will still give you some left-over instrumentation sometimes.
But for guitar lovers I think it's really good. To give you an impression, this is a raw exprt of the drum/bass/vocal stems of The Fly, so guitars are left out:
[YouTube Video]
Originally posted by melon51:I think album tracks have so much going on on the "other track" that you're indeed left with bare bones drum/bass. You could try splitting into 5 stems to see if there's anything left on the other "other" track to fill up harmonics while still leaving the guitar out..
Originally posted by melon51:I think album tracks have so much going on on the "other track" that you're indeed left with bare bones drum/bass. You could try splitting into 5 stems to see if there's anything left on the other "other" track to fill up harmonics while still leaving the guitar out..
Originally posted by eladanelf:[..]
Yeah that's not a possibility sadly. Would be nice to keep some abience sounds. But the guitar and all the extra sounds are all on the same track in this software. Yeah I think IEM might work, though the bass and drums are often not as present as it is in the DVD/bluray audios.