In another thread, I mentioned the GOYO Voice Separator plugin that can remove vocals, or at least reduce them way down, without greatly affecting the other audio. It has 3 tools - Ambience, Voice and Voice Reverb - so it acts like a Noise Reduction and DeVerb (remove reverb) tool. It seems to be very good and I am impressed. It is currently free as it's a beta until the end of October. Anyone signing up will get a big discount when the final version comes out. The installer installed VST2 and VST3 dll's so it can be used in Movie Studio Platinum/Suite (in the Mixer) and VPX15.

And good tip on the GOYO plugin, I had seen that shown off in a YouTube clip before, was impressed but forgot what it was called! Will probably follow up now, can remember there being some fuss about the always-online situation or data collection etc, so I hesitated at the time and moved on. Seems sensible to download it now to secure the reduced price when the full version is released.


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Has anybody perchance been able to install this plugin on Linux? I recently managed to make work a github project that removes backgrounds from video, with that and this plugin I'd be totally covered from nasty environments to make my media...

The process to install Yabridge and make it detect plugins seemed also very unclear to me. For example, I don't know what "wine prefixes" are. With LinVST, you convert the .dll files to .so and you're good to go. The installing of Yabridge also seems unclear, and also how to operate it; I don't know if it's a demon you have to initialize at boot, a command that you have to run one time per plugin...

1) using windows plugins may be very tricky, and there is risk that they stop working. If wanting to avoid time wasted in tinkering, stay with linux native plugins. Sure it if possible to hit problems even with native plugins, specially when using Ardour/Mixbus as a DAW

4) Wine prefix is one 'windows installation'. If you don't set environment variable WINEPREFIX, your prefix will be ~/.wine directory, but you can have as many as you want. I have few separate prefixes for plugins, so that would avoid breaking all at the same time.

Yeah, I stick to Linux plugins whenever I can... But there's not suitable Linux alternative to Goyo at the moment, is there? Other than that, I have had an incredible good luck with LinVST, perhaps because my plugin needs are very modest and I always use the same ones. The only exception is perhaps Analog Obsession's mic preamp emulator, which does the very frustrating thing of working great at first... and then one day it starts to garble the sound and make the computer gasp like a beast. I haven't found a Linux alternative for that one either, at the moment...

I've been running plain ol' Ubuntu and Wine-Stable /w LinVST since switching over from Mac a few years ago, pretty much without a hitch. Within the last year and half or so as more plugins were getting updated i started having some issues and would just roll-back to the previous version that worked. Ubuntu 22.04 (Jammy), wine-stable 8.0.1 along with LinVST 3.6 (it's @ 4.9) was the end point. Come 8.0.2 of wine-stable was the final nail for that party. Funnily enough, Goyo was the last plugin that i ran (successfully) thru LinVST. Then being a Bitwig user and with the latest version of that (v5), almost none of the guis for these plugins show up. Soooo... at some point down the line i'll have to set aside some time for a total re-vamp (but not anytime soon).

Thank you for all the advice; but I'm afraid I'm getting cold feet, the risk of screwing my system is too high. I can only guide myself by the official instructions of WineHQ, and the solution you propose goes frontally against what they say, it seems to be some kind of high sophistication that I don't think is right now within my powers of very basic power user... I'll just stick by the moment to non-AI noise filters, I'm sure in a year or two, when this AI thing is more normalized, plugins like this will be a dime a dozen... Thank you so much anyway for taking the time, I've learned a lot...

It has turned out to be easy, just removing the old one with apt-get remove, purge and rm the related folders... and then I've installed Wine Stable from the WineHQ repositories, and everything has started to work again, and then I've tried Goyo and the installer this time has started and now the plugin works, and also my system is notoriously less sluggish...

IAnd if some one talking about voice seperator as windows plugin running on Linux, this totally useless topic is here in the main section of this forum.

Ain't it belonging to another part of this forum then here?

Yeah, more accurate place would be that 'running non-linux software', but most likely normal user cannot move post after it is created. Looks like nearly half of the posts related to windows-plugins are posted to wrong place, but moving them is up to admins.

Hi y'all! 

So I left the movies for radio, but still I keep using wireless mics and recording stuff outside, as if it were a movie shoot (but without the cameras). And in post, I still use the same tricks. However, I stumbled upon this little plugin called Goyo, which is a noise and reverb reducing plugin using AI in some sense. GOYO Voice Separator | De-noise, De-Reverb, De-Voice - All in One Plugin


Quick review: 


It does what it says. I hear artifacts if I crank it hard enough. It's great to be able to just turn the BG down a tad, and then I can hardly hear the artifacts. Especially not if I'm imagining sitting in a car or listening in headphones on the subway, or on my kitchen table radio. I've found it to be super quick and very easy to use. It's free, as of now. I have it in a big mixing project now, using maybe four instances and the CPU performance is not affected much.

Goyo will go EOL on Dec. 1. It was working well here but I'm working on a doc feature the mix for which will go well beyond Dec 1, so I got "Clear", the paid-for version. It currently doesn't work properly within Reaper without some workarounds, but seemed ok in other DAWs incl. PT. It's pretty helpful, more for DX reverb than BG noise, but its very fast to use. You can push it too hard and make it sound bad, and it follows "Berger's Law" just as much as any other NR plugin or device (works best when you need it the least).

glad to see it works in pro tools real time and audiosuite - feels very similar results to rx10 but all the work of 3x sep plugins at one time real time in trade for some of the more precision settings is very sleek

totally agree, tricks with delay compensation works well when finessed properly. Typically i would use audiosuite "assistant" rx plug to try and get similar results. Clear is indeed a very nice plugin for the price

To Brian's point above, he's right about this basically being an extended trial. The startup has raised a good deal of cash and I would expect they're going to be charging for this plugin as soon as they do an official release, and we have no idea what their pricing would be like. If it's under $50, I'd very likely pick this up. If it's $100 or more or is on subscription, I'm out. But after using it, I really like it and want to check out the Waves plugin for comparison. One thing that surprised me was that I found Goyo pretty light on resources and I wasn't expecting that. I believe my RX8 is more resource intensive. I put the Goyo on a vocal track in a project with around 32 instances of KONTAKT libraries and was still able to play keys without much latency. I don't think that would be the case with RX8.

I found this nice plugin for distraction free writing named Goyo, which is really well done.I setup autocmds to enable Goyo based on the filetype, so if I work on a markdown or textfile Goyo gets initialized automatically. If I leave the buffer or change the filetype then Goyo gets closed. Below is how I implemented the behaviour:

That's just fine and how I would implemented it, too. As you only hook into the FileType event, the toggling is only triggered when you :edit a new file, not when you recall an existing buffer with another filetype. You could do that with BufWinEnter, but it may cause too many inadvertent togglings. I guess the plugin comes with a quick toggle mapping to manually do this, anyway.

An alternative to the autocmd FileType commands is filetype plugins (i.e. ~/.vim/ftplugin/markdown.vim etc.), which have the benefit of separating things neatly. But as you need a catch-all autocmd to turn off Goyo, and the list of filetypes is small, I would also prefer keeping things together, just like you did. 2351a5e196

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