User:PeterSampson

=Peter Sampson's user page=

Just to remind me how to do gray formatting.

Just to remind me how to do large formatting.

Just to remind me how to do huge formatting.

Sand-Box
for experimentation:

User:PeterSampson/Sand-Box

Bill's backup tutorial
User:Billw58/Backup Strategies

Link to possibly redundant internationalized Px
ToDoi18n

Koz' tutorials on overdub recording
Link to orphan page from this tutorial set: User:PeterSampson/Tutorial: Overdubbing using software methods

Tutorial for CD remixing
This is a link to a draft tutorial for remixing a commercial CD: User:PeterSampson/Tutorial: Re-mixing a CD  -  Mock Up Version-1 This tutorial was originally written by Audacity user Chuck Moore ( Cfmoore1 ) who wanted to remix some Beatles 2009 Remastered CDs, the early ones which were originally mono but which the studio re-released in 2009 in a pseudo-stereo mix. The studio mix is indeed somewhat odd as it places the instruments on one side of the sound stage and the voices on the other. Sounds ok-ish on speakers if you don't listen closely - but sounds distictly odd on headphones. Chuck undertook for his debut project with Audacity a remix of Please Please Me and has recently finished With The Beatles. His objective was to create a more natural sound stage by taking sound clips and remixing (ambitious for a starter project). I gave him some help with this via the forum and through some PMs. I asked him if he would be good enough to write up his process as a tutorial; this is his draft (which I will Wiki-ise with Wiki markup formatting) - once that is done I will be seeking feedback from the manual "list". He says "I do not mind people putting their knives to what I wrote. The procedure is right but if the wording does not convey to the reader what I did then it needs to be changed."


 * Peter 18Jun10: Following f/b from when I first floated this tutorial idea I agree that it is not appropriate for the manual as it is too specific - accordingly.I will probably transfer it to the Wiki at some stage when I get some free time.