Utagoe is a program which allows for the extraction of acapellas or instrumentals by "subtracting" audio from a full song.
Thanks to Bädo Innos for a more updated version!
DOWNLOAD
TUTORIAL FOR OLDER VERSION IS UNDER THE CURRENT VERSION. IT GOES INTO MORE DEPTH, BUT MAY BE INCORRECT INFORMATION. MOST OF THE CONCEPTS STAY THE SAME, THOUGH.
EDIT: NEW TUTORIAL
IN PICTURE FORM
Once you run the program, you will notice that most of the text will be question marks ("?"). This is because the program was developed in Japan and never had an english port, but that is not much of a problem.
This information comes from Utagoe's included help PDF, which was all in Japanese and translated using google translate. Some of it may be incorrect, but I used common sense to make sense of it. It in theory should be all correct. The final page was not critical information, but you are still free to translate it for yourself if you are running into problems.
OLDER VERSION(S) OF UTAGOE:
Once opening, you will see this -
(Except the text will not be there. The file directories will be there, EX. C:\Users\___\Desktop\bingbang.wav)
The folder icon next to the file directory. Pressing this icon will allow you to add a file the easy way with file explorer.
I've never used it, but I assume that the speaker icon next to it allows playback of the wav file.
-First file is the full song,
-Second file is the file you want to be "subtracted" from the original. In theory, if your second file is an acapella/vocal track, subtracting this from the first file would leave you with an instrumental. In this case, though, we don't have the acapella, so we are going to add the instrumental.
-Third file is the file name you want to give the final product (ex. the vocal track). This file does not have to exist, it can be anything in any directory (preferably the desktop).
Here is an example:
Now, to the other buttons.
The large button in the top right with a musical symbol is the button that runs the process and does all of the hard work. If everything works as planned, pressing this button will show a progress bar at the bottom. If it is taking a while (It shouldn't), you should still be able to play the song while it is being processed (At least in VLC).
If the finished track doesn't sound clean (or just didn't work properly at all), you can press the second button down (It looks like a hammer and wrench) to modify settings.
I do not know what most of the settings do, but I will try to explain them as best as I can.
That is the tab/page you should see when opening the settings section.
The slider on the right is the most effective way to tweak the amount of subtracting that the program does, the lower end removing less sound, but sounding more normal, and the higher end removing more, but at the risk of sounding more "robotic" when finished. I generally use a setting of 2.1, but this varies a little song by song.
You will have to play with the other radio buttons a little bit to get the vocals to a more acceptable level, but leaving them at the default is good enough, most of the time.
The second tab has a few more settings, most notably being the high and low pass filters.
I am not sure about the others, but the top right option seems to be how many passes the program does when removing the instrumental from the song. (Ex. Removing the instrumental once, then taking the result and removing the instrumental again).
So, that is how you use Utagoe. I am sure that it is not the finest method for extracting vocals from a song, but it is pretty easy.
Edit: Here's what All Together sounds like when using all default settings except for the slider at 2.1: All Together Vocals
Thanks to Bädo Innos for a more updated version!
DOWNLOAD
TUTORIAL FOR OLDER VERSION IS UNDER THE CURRENT VERSION. IT GOES INTO MORE DEPTH, BUT MAY BE INCORRECT INFORMATION. MOST OF THE CONCEPTS STAY THE SAME, THOUGH.
EDIT: NEW TUTORIAL
IN PICTURE FORM
Once you run the program, you will notice that most of the text will be question marks ("?"). This is because the program was developed in Japan and never had an english port, but that is not much of a problem.
This information comes from Utagoe's included help PDF, which was all in Japanese and translated using google translate. Some of it may be incorrect, but I used common sense to make sense of it. It in theory should be all correct. The final page was not critical information, but you are still free to translate it for yourself if you are running into problems.
OLDER VERSION(S) OF UTAGOE:
Once opening, you will see this -
(Except the text will not be there. The file directories will be there, EX. C:\Users\___\Desktop\bingbang.wav)
The folder icon next to the file directory. Pressing this icon will allow you to add a file the easy way with file explorer.
I've never used it, but I assume that the speaker icon next to it allows playback of the wav file.
-First file is the full song,
-Second file is the file you want to be "subtracted" from the original. In theory, if your second file is an acapella/vocal track, subtracting this from the first file would leave you with an instrumental. In this case, though, we don't have the acapella, so we are going to add the instrumental.
-Third file is the file name you want to give the final product (ex. the vocal track). This file does not have to exist, it can be anything in any directory (preferably the desktop).
Here is an example:
Now, to the other buttons.
The large button in the top right with a musical symbol is the button that runs the process and does all of the hard work. If everything works as planned, pressing this button will show a progress bar at the bottom. If it is taking a while (It shouldn't), you should still be able to play the song while it is being processed (At least in VLC).
If the finished track doesn't sound clean (or just didn't work properly at all), you can press the second button down (It looks like a hammer and wrench) to modify settings.
I do not know what most of the settings do, but I will try to explain them as best as I can.
That is the tab/page you should see when opening the settings section.
The slider on the right is the most effective way to tweak the amount of subtracting that the program does, the lower end removing less sound, but sounding more normal, and the higher end removing more, but at the risk of sounding more "robotic" when finished. I generally use a setting of 2.1, but this varies a little song by song.
You will have to play with the other radio buttons a little bit to get the vocals to a more acceptable level, but leaving them at the default is good enough, most of the time.
The second tab has a few more settings, most notably being the high and low pass filters.
I am not sure about the others, but the top right option seems to be how many passes the program does when removing the instrumental from the song. (Ex. Removing the instrumental once, then taking the result and removing the instrumental again).
So, that is how you use Utagoe. I am sure that it is not the finest method for extracting vocals from a song, but it is pretty easy.
Edit: Here's what All Together sounds like when using all default settings except for the slider at 2.1: All Together Vocals
Comment