On Wed, 2003-10-22 at 20:14, Reuben Martin wrote: > First: Using an equalizer, kill all frequencies below ~600 and above ~2k. Use a graphic EQ for this. (The two values are just examples, you can play with both frequencies to get the desired sound you're looking for.) That's pretty harsh. Recent vinyl records actually have a pretty good frequency response. > Second: get a recording of the inside blank track that comes after the last song of a noisy record. Loop this noise and mix it over top of the song once you've done the band pass filter from step one. It's actually the dust motes that contribute the most to the "vinyl feel". It should be fun to simulate that, actually. Should be like... lemme see... white noise shot through narrow and tall envelopes. Pretty much like the attack phase of the piano sound, except that the parameters are different (hence it sounds more like "plastic" than "metal"). -- Florin Andrei http://florin.myip.org/