I'm sure that other (more experienced) tapers could chime in, but I'll give you the few knowledge I have about this.
Recordings that ended up being distorted/too hot/clipping are NOT fixable. Those spots where the audio clips are fragments of sound that reached the maximum input that your recorded can handle, and therefore they're not correctly readable anymore, or fixable in any way. You can try to do white-noise reduction, volume normalizations, etc but all that stuff ends up being quite useless since the distorted spot is going to remain there no matter what you do. It's sad but we have to deal with the fact.
Doing an analogy which is pretty easy to understand, let's assume you have a mic/recorder that can handle '
10' as it maximum volume.
If the sound source you're providing to it goes like..: 2, 4,
12, 3,
17,
11, 6,
10, 9,
14,
15, 8,
11,
12,
14, 8
The volume you'll be recording will be something like: 2, 4,
10, 3,
10,
10, 6,
10, 9,
10,
10, 8,
10,
10,
10, 8
The spots where there's a
10 are the spots where it's distorting because the input is too loud for your recorder to handle it. The recorder saved them all as 10's and that's why they aren't recoverable (there's no way to know if that 10 actually belongs to a 12, 13 or 17).
I think that's pretty easy to understand.
I'm sorry for the part of your recording that came too hot, maybe you can simply run a bass&noise filter in those songs, and fix the sound by patching a higher % of the other recording? Good luck
