Hello, Ishumael,
If I understand your question correctly, there was once a WAV file
that was then encoded as an MP3 and the WAV file went away and now
you wish to reconstruct it from the MP3. Is this a quick assessment
of what you wish to do?
If it is, I'm afraid that the MP3 coding process throws away
"inaudible" information or "barely audible" information, and I doubt
there is any way of getting that back.
When you speak of "distortion" if that existed in the original, there
are some "de-clip" algorithms that are marginally successful if the
wind is blowing from the right direction in slightly removing some
forms of clipping, but, all-in-all, the experience I've had with
these have barely been worth the effort.
It would be best to somehow re-generate the original WAV files,
preferably at 48 ks/s 24 bits for voice or 96 ks/s 24 bits for music.
Sorry.
Richard
At 04:58 PM 2010-04-03, you wrote:
>Dear colleagues
>I do hope I find you well.
>I would like ask for advice on the following:
>1. Is it possible to undistort a recording that has been compressed
>from a wav file to mp3 and manage to listen to the original
>recording if one was to use the same software (adobe audition) to
>listen to the recording2.What is the best possible way of voice
>distortion in adobe audition.
>RegardsIshumael
>
Richard L. Hess email: [log in to unmask]
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.
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