Judge Magister
02-08-2013, 09:05 PM
Hello everybody

Can anyone help me ?
I'd like to learn how rip music from DVD or BR and separate the various channels of the 5.1 output, to do complete scores.
So I have a couple of questions.....
Can you suggest me some programs and methods to do it ?
There's a way to filter voices and and SFX ?

After how long are released the recording session of a movie ?


Thanks and sorry for bad english

docrate1
02-09-2013, 01:59 AM
Just before the wild horde falls on you for mixing up recording sessions and complete scores:

Score: the music heard in the movie, including the source music (heard by the movie protagonists).
Recording Sessions: as the name implies, this is a copy of the actual recording of the score, complete, with often alternate versions of the same cue in variable numbers. it can be obtained through trading with people working in the industry. not available on the market (except sometimes on Ebay), not possible to "rip from a DVD".
Score album: the commerically available album, often released at the time of the movie release, sometimes a bit afterward, sometimes a lot afterward, sometimes...never.
Expanded score: the same, but with bits and pieces added to it by fan, either ripped from DVDs or from composers websites (which is better, because it's SFX-clean most of the time). Doesn't have all the film music.
Complete score: same concept, except ALL the film score is there. all of it.

And finally:

Thread 84885

Francis_RL
07-28-2013, 04:05 PM
Score: the music heard in the movie, including the source music (heard by the movie protagonists).
Recording Sessions: as the name implies, this is a copy of the actual recording of the score, complete, with often alternate versions of the same cue in variable numbers. it can be obtained through trading with people working in the industry. not available on the market (except sometimes on Ebay), not possible to "rip from a DVD".
Score album: the commerically available album, often released at the time of the movie release, sometimes a bit afterward, sometimes a lot afterward, sometimes...never.
Expanded score: the same, but with bits and pieces added to it by fan, either ripped from DVDs or from composers websites (which is better, because it's SFX-clean most of the time). Doesn't have all the film music.
Complete score: same concept, except ALL the film score is there. all of it.

And finally:

Thread 84885

That was clear allright

Amanda
07-28-2013, 04:55 PM
Two points he should know.

1) Sessions are not "released". They are leaked. As such they are always unofficial, and truly are stolen property. This means there just is no way to say when a set of sessions will surface, if ever. Some have popped up within months of the movie's release. Many, many more have never surfaced. While sessions for all movies obviously exist, the vast majority of them remain unleaked or unreleased. There are a lot available to the deepest trading circle, but these things carry monetary and trade leverage, so are not just freely available.

2) Complete score can be a matter of some debate. Many sessions, and the newer small label sets, contain the music as written for the film by the composer, and as recorded in the sessions. If all of the original score is present, it is complete. But, this discounts later editing decisions, so film version tracks are most often missing. Tracked music is discounted so is usually missing. So for many, unless a set has all of the original score material, film edit versions, tracked music, and for many trailer music and known alternate takes, it just isn't "complete". The desirability for this is a personal taste sort of thing.

tehƧP@ƦKly�ANK� -Ⅲ�
07-29-2013, 02:26 AM
Splitting movie audio?
Definitely check out that guide as well as a few posted in the "isolated score" thread.

NOTE!: "Isolated" score is not the same as separating 5.1 audio to isolate the music.
"Isolated scores" are produced, mixed and manufactured in studios to be on the disc. That is we don't have to do it, it's done for us!

FunnyML posted three links worth looking at for the work ahead of you.
http://forums.ffshrine.org/f92/isolated-scores-113650/17.html#post2396907

I've posted severe skepticism and cynicism each time someone asks.
It's a daunting task and requires a lot of patience.
Since it's your first time, you will need to spend a few days getting to know...


Your environment/limitations (hard drive space, operating system, time frame, etc)
Your software/limitations (freeware, paid/cracked software, Command-Line Interace (CLI) or need a GUI?)
Your knowledge/understanding (reading everything over and going step by step, trial and error, recalculating your expectations and given time frame)



For absolute beginners, take a week to go through everything several times over.

Don't expect:

To learn quickly
To get it done in one day
To get perfect results



Best thing to do is read everything, and then read it again, do it and read it as you go along, and then after some trial and error, create a strategy.
Once you realize what you can and cannot do, you'll be able to better organize yourself and plan everything easier.