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I do documentary style videos on YouTube so all narration/voice-over is recorded separately and in a fairly-basic treated room, so coloration & ambient noise isn't an issue, which is why I use a condenser rather than a dynamic mic. I currently rock a Maono AU-PM422 (first and only mic I've had so far) and while the quality is actually great for its entry price-point, I'm looking to upgrade to an XLR setup and have set my sights on a Rode NT1 & Rode AI-1 audio interface. However, one thing that annoys me to no end is spending a good amount of time in Adobe Audition knocking out every little breath and the pops/clicks mouth sounds. Do the higher quality mics kill these sounds or is it just a fact of life and I need to start drinking a gallon of water two hours before every recording?

EDIT: I have a pop filter that handles plosive sounds just fine, that's why I said 'non-plosive clicks/pops,' it's the mouth/spit sounds I'm having issues with, not plosive pops. Sorry, I should've worded better!

I do documentary style videos on YouTube so all narration/voice-over is recorded separately and in a fairly-basic treated room, so coloration & ambient noise isn't an issue, which is why I use a condenser rather than a dynamic mic. I currently rock a Maono AU-PM422 (first and only mic I've had so far) and while the quality is actually great for its entry price-point, I'm looking to upgrade to an XLR setup and have set my sights on a Rode NT1 & Rode AI-1 audio interface. However, one thing that annoys me to no end is spending a good amount of time in Adobe Audition knocking out every little breath and the pops/clicks mouth sounds. Do the higher quality mics kill these sounds or is it just a fact of life and I need to start drinking a gallon of water two hours before every recording? EDIT: I have a pop filter that handles plosive sounds just fine, that's why I said 'non-plosive clicks/pops,' it's the mouth/spit sounds I'm having issues with, not plosive pops. Sorry, I should've worded better!

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[–] 1 pt

Audacity has a good de-esser plugin: https://forum.audacityteam.org/viewtopic.php?p=245549#p245549

High frequency sibilance tends to carry forward from the tip of the tongue. Lav mics are an easy fix, since they fit around the collar.

If your mic is sensitive enough, just back it off and to the side.

check out pictures of the joe rogan podcast. almost all his guests (who aren't trained vocalists) have their mics set 4 inches below and 6 inches back from their mouths. that's on purpose. the sibilant noises carry well over the mic, and not into it. this sacrifices some timbre, but overall the quality doesnt suffer.

[–] 0 pt

I wonder what knowledge I’m replacing with this knowledge? What was the question? Oh ya um..... Eq and mic placement. Good info mate , I wonder if op will read this far ?

Got all of it 👍🏻
I’ve got a deep voice and actually drop the low end by -2db in post, so sibilants is opposite my issue lol.

[–] 0 pt

Ya I think there’s some good info here.right on.