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Using software to adjust voice volumes

Started by ticktock, November 12, 2018, 07:38:53 PM

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ticktock

Hi friends,
I downloaded voices from this forum and other websites but their volumes are either too loud or too soft. Instead of adjusting the volume on keyboard (would take time), I'm wondering if I can adjust the volumes using PC programs?
Thanks all for your help.
Ted

Ed B

Hi Tom
Yes MixMaster will allow you to do this. There is a manual with the program.
http://psrtutorial.com/MB/mixMaster.html
Regards
Ed B
Keep on learning

Dick Rector

Jososoft from our friend Jorgen. "Style Volume Changer".
PSR-2000 and PSR-S950

ticktock

Thanks Ed and Dick, but these are voices (.vce) that I saved in USB, not voices that embeded in styles (sty). I tried Mixmaster but couldn't find it. I clicked the volume button and a window appeared with something I had no clue. Sorry, I am not a tech guy.
Hope to hear more.
Thanks, Ted

Pino

OT, 
'ticktock' in Thai means "crazy", just thought you may want to know that, 😀😅

jwyvern

Quote from: ticktock on November 12, 2018, 07:38:53 PM
Hi friends,
I downloaded voices from this forum and other websites but their volumes are either too loud or too soft. Instead of adjusting the volume on keyboard (would take time), I'm wondering if I can adjust the volumes using PC programs?
Thanks all for your help.
Ted

In this case it may be quicker to adjust volumes by loading them into the keyboard rather than trying to do it  with external software. There are various ways to do it, the obvious one being to adjust the balances when making up a registration or OTS, but you must know that.
Additionally each voice has its own "internal" volume setting which you can adjust by going to Voice Set or Voice Editor as it might be called on some keyboards. (It is usually in the Common section of Voice Set).
Once at a level you approve of you must save it as a User voice so that voice will in future will always be set at that level.
But you might still have to tweak the balance when you use it in a future voice set up to get it sounding really right.
(I nearly always have to do that.)
John

ticktock

Hi Pino,
I didn't know that meaning in Thai, wow. Good to know. I thought it is the timing sound, ticking every 0.5 second, measuring our lives as long as we're living on this planet.
Hi John,
I started doing like that on KB (voice set) and getting tired after about 10 voices. OK! I'd continue doing it.
Thank you all.
Ted