Archival processing
As promised, I will respond to some questions that are asked via email by answering here in the Blog.
One of the things I’m most concerned with is the appropriate use of digital processing in transcription for cleanup or remastering of digital archival copies. This includes both questions of when (if at all) processing beyond the actual A/D conversion is appropriate, and which are the techniques and currently available tools best suited to archival audio.
It’s a good question. To some extent, it depends on the client and the final use.
If the restoration/preservation reformatting is for an institutional client, then the first transfers should be as unprocessed as possible — at least the initial copies that are archived should be done that way. The main reason for this is that processing algorithms will always get better and they may hide some information that is useful to future researchers–information that today we consider “noise.” (more…)