Cedar, Sonic Solutions No Noise, Diamond Cut 5, and Algorithmix are all sources of noise reduction. HOWEVER, I strongly suggest bringing the oral history tapes across to the new medium with as flat a transfer as possible. None of these, and I've only heard two of the four in detail, is transparent and all of them can be way over done. It is safe to assume that noise reduction will get better over time. Starting with the original noise later will be easier than removing the artifacts left by today's noise reduction. Personally, I use Samplitude ( http://www.samplitude.com ) and may some day move to Sequoia for the 4-point editing and the ability to use Algorithmix plugins. Diamond Cut DC5 is a stand-alone program that I also run. I had someone, in my opinion, abuse Cedar during the remastering of one of my original recordings for CD release to bring it up to "today's standards for background noise." The noise was from the *&%# pipe organ NOT the recording chain--it was 15 in/s Dolby A with two mics, no mixer. Cheers, Richard At 01:18 PM 6/2/2003 -0500, Brandon wrote in part: > With that im mind, I'm looking for some nice noise >reduction plug-ins and don't really need much else, though we would like to be >prepared to transfer music as well.