The power of FM9 and Moises

Dirty145

Inspired
I decided to have a little fun and download a free YouTube to audio converter. I put the audio through Moises (also free) and separated the tracks out. Put the backing tracks (minus guitar) into Reaper and then recorded my FM9 over the backing track. I literally just did two takes (original and then a double) just to see if it would work. I didn’t mix or master, but thought it sounded pretty decent. Take a listen and let me know. Thanks!!

 
Sounds pretty good, the guitar is a tad loud in the mix but really cool out come! I have been looking for something like this. I have got back together with a drummer buddy and we need a bass and rhythm track to practice to.
 
Sounds pretty good, the guitar is a tad loud in the mix but really cool out come! I have been looking for something like this. I have got back together with a drummer buddy and we need a bass and rhythm track to practice to.
Yeah, I left it a little louder, so I could hear the preset and make sure the tone was good. This could definitely work for something like that!
 
You BETTER have played that on a Silverburst LP! 😂

I ❤️❤️❤️ Tool

Sounds great and well played.

Moises is absolutely great for making/playing to backing tracks. And for removing vocals from some stuff where I love the music except for the vocals (not talking about Tool; it's when vocals have too much screaming that can sometimes bother me).

Edited again to add: Moises is subscription based AFAIK....?

Edited to add budget AJ porn:
2BA9A976-C23D-4820-BB16-5082C6BC2D56.jpeg
 
You BETTER have played that on a Silverburst LP! 😂

I ❤️❤️❤️ Tool

Sounds great and well played.

Moises is absolutely great for making/playing to backing tracks. And for removing vocals from some stuff where I love the music except for the vocals (not talking about Tool; it's when vocals have too much screaming that can sometimes bother me).

Edited again to add: Moises is subscription based AFAIK....?

Edited to add budget AJ porn:
View attachment 114340
Thanks man! Hahah, I got half of the formula, as I did use a Les Paul. Moises is one of those, you get so many uploads per month for free. You would definitely need to pay if you wanted to do more than 5 songs per month. Love the AJ Porn!
 
I just downloaded reaper for free on my pc so I can start playing along to backing tracks with just my guitar. Is this an easy process? So you first convert a YouTube link to mp3, and then upload the mp3 link to reaper. And then record guitar via fm9/usb (nothing else needed right?) in reaper?
 
I just downloaded reaper for free on my pc so I can start playing along to backing tracks with just my guitar. Is this an easy process? So you first convert a YouTube link to mp3, and then upload the mp3 link to reaper. And then record guitar via fm9/usb (nothing else needed right?) in reaper?
You need a program like Moises that will separate the tracks out for you. In the free version of Moises, you can get isolated tracks of vocals, drums, bass, and guitar. For my example above, I simply pulled the 3 backing tracks into Reaper and then recorded my guitar parts over top of that.
 
You need a program like Moises that will separate the tracks out for you. In the free version of Moises, you can get isolated tracks of vocals, drums, bass, and guitar. For my example above, I simply pulled the 3 backing tracks into Reaper and then recorded my guitar parts over top of that.
Oh wow yes I forgot to include that step lol. Which free YouTube mp3 converter did you use?
 
1) Download from youtube with 4k Video Downloader
2) Split MP3 into STEMS with either Moises or Stemroller
3) Import STEMS into reaper and mix levels to hearts content.
Sweet thanks. How you liking reaper? I only downloaded for my pc because I heard it’s free but haven’t used yet.
 
I've been playing with Moises and Stemroller. I like that Moises can attempt to separate the guitar into a distinct track, but each track has a lot of bleed-over from other tracks. Stemroller can't separate the guitar, but the tracks are much cleaner. Also, Moises, because it's in the cloud, has a lot more computing power available to it, so it seems to split a file in 50% of the time that Stemroller can on my iMac Pro. Either of them is better than anything I'd have been able to do with a DAW by itself.
 
I've been playing with Moises and Stemroller. I like that Moises can attempt to separate the guitar into a distinct track, but each track has a lot of bleed-over from other tracks. Stemroller can't separate the guitar, but the tracks are much cleaner. Also, Moises, because it's in the cloud, has a lot more computing power available to it, so it seems to split a file in 50% of the time that Stemroller can on my iMac Pro. Either of them is better than anything I'd have been able to do with a DAW by itself.
Good info.

I've been using Moises and it does a pretty good job. Definitely good enough for me for making a backing track or for isolating the guitar for learning/tone dialing purposes.

I remember the time when people had to play sections a song over and over using a record player or cassette player and struggled to actually hear a guitar part in the mix. Tools like this, along with ability to easily loop and/or slow down sections, make things a lot more efficient. And that's not even considering tabs and such.

I do love me some technology.
 
Good info.

I've been using Moises and it does a pretty good job. Definitely good enough for me for making a backing track or for isolating the guitar for learning/tone dialing purposes.

I remember the time when people had to play sections a song over and over using a record player or cassette player and struggled to actually hear a guitar part in the mix. Tools like this, along with ability to easily loop and/or slow down sections, make things a lot more efficient. And that's not even considering tabs and such.

I do love me some technology.
Have you used it to make a click track? Thinking of doing this for some keyboard sounds
 
remember the time when people had to play sections a song over and over using a record player or cassette player and struggled to actually hear a guitar part in the mix. Tools like this, along with ability to easily loop and/or slow down sections, make things a lot more efficient. And that's not even considering tabs and such.
I found using my turntable to be very helpful. I had a good Thorens turntable that would go to 16 RPM so a guitar part was 1/2 speed and an octave down.

Losing that ability was the worst part about switching to CDs.
 
You need a program like Moises that will separate the tracks out for you. In the free version of Moises, you can get isolated tracks of vocals, drums, bass, and guitar. For my example above, I simply pulled the 3 backing tracks into Reaper and then recorded my guitar parts over top of that.

The free version gives you Vocals/Drums/Bass/Other. You need the paid version to get Vocals/Drums/Bass/Other/Guitar.

I've been using Moises for a couple of years. It underwent a significant improvement about a year ago. It's not as good as a proper backing track of course, but if I can't find what I'm looking for at karaoke version, I find Moises is a great alternative.
 
Back
Top Bottom