Hi Mark!

Just some ideas from me. This could prove difficult, as the waveforms will be clipping i guess. i have two ideas you could try. if the distortion isn't to bad, maybe play around with a de-esser???? guess you have tried that before... or cutoff the annoying part and replace it with a new undistorted high freq section. like if you mix one record that has the highs pulled out with the highs of another record for lack of better explanation. if it where mainly percs in the offending region that could work, i suppose.

you could try a bandpass/bandreject filter (like grm bandpass --> pm me if you need that one...) . only problem is filling up the gaps in the spectrum later on.

no chance of going back to the track in the sequencer??

where is the distortion sitting frequency-wise and how broad a region does it affect? this info would be very helpful...

hope this is of any help?

maybe noise reduction or hiss removal algorythms could help, too, like the soundforge noise reduction etc.. but one must be careful not to overdo it coz it can cause artifacts itself if you are not careful. or zoom in and trim the peaks yourself :roll:

you got my brain burning ;)

i am definitely not as experienced as you are, but i will try and help as good as i can. if you really can't get that stuff fixed, i would be more than willing to have a look at a little snippet of that track but i am sure
you will get it worked out.

;)