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Audio treatment with Adobe Audition
Posted by Verdoni Philippe on July 26, 2005 at 7:27 pmI will be very gracefull to someone who could define a process to export and reimport to/from Adobe Audition a series of audio tracks generated in an Adobe PPro 1.5 project after they have been encoded as a 5.1 into a multi-channel track using Audition.
Verdoni Philippe replied 20 years, 9 months ago 2 Members · 8 Replies -
8 Replies
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Craig Howard
July 26, 2005 at 9:39 pmLook into Render and Replace. It may solve your problem.
Here are some steps to follow ( Courtesy of Roger who advised me of this when I needed similar help)
Press & Hold Alt Key
Click on Audio portion of Clip – release alt key
GO to Menu -Clip – Audio Options – Render & Replace
Right Click on Audio Clip – choose Edit Original
Audition should load clip ( File association must be Wav/Audition)
Edit in Audition and the clip will automatically update in Prem Project(There is an additional option to set in Audition when saving – not at my machine but it is obvious. It ensures the clip knows where it came from)
Craig
Shooter Film Company
Auckland
New Zealand(Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)
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Verdoni Philippe
July 27, 2005 at 10:20 amThank you for your help, in fact my problem is even more complicated since I would like to export/reimport in the same time all the audio tracks which are in parallel associated with a video track (for instance the initial sound + the added music) in order to mix them as a 5.1 track in Adobe Audition. The difficulty is to keep their relative position in Audition as they where in Premiere.
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Craig Howard
July 29, 2005 at 5:25 amNo problem at all : Use a Pip frame on Leader Frame 2 (as per industry) standard for each track.
Craig
Shooter Film Company
Auckland
New Zealand(Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)
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Verdoni Philippe
July 29, 2005 at 7:05 amCould you give me some more explainations about what you call Picture in picture frame and Leader Frame. Thank you
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Craig Howard
July 31, 2005 at 10:44 pmPIP is not picture in picture in this case.It is pronouced as it looks “pip” (as in tip , rip, flip)
It is the sound of a one frame tone (usually 1000hz)
The pip frame is usually at 2 secs on the countdown leader.(It is a single frame that says “2”)
Create a countdown leader in Premiere Pro and you will see exactly what I mean.(It is very simple)
In a multi track edit you would put a countdown leader on the video – Vid 1 and Audio 1 (that is the default)
Now you need to duplicate the audio track and put it on all the other audio tracks so each “pips” sounds on two.
Now you have a reference point for all audio to video that you can get back to after your processing in Audition.
Hope this helps.
Craig
Shooter Film Company
Auckland
New Zealand(Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)
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Verdoni Philippe
August 1, 2005 at 12:22 pmThank you very much, now I can understand the concept of this sound/video synchronization method. However I have a difficulty to copy the audio on each sound track since it only accept to be copied on the lower soundtrack (Audio 4) of my project. Similarly when I place the Video part of the countdown leader on Video track 1, the Audio goes only to Audio track 4. I feel as much anxious as if I had to jump from the Sky Tower of the magnificent city of Auckland!
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Craig Howard
August 1, 2005 at 8:33 pmThe tracks in PremPro are either Stereo, mono or 5.1. and you can only place respective audio to those tracks.
You can create additional tracks appropriate. The Countdown leader audio you created will be stereo.
Don’t jump…we can get you thru’ this .
BTW – you can use any single frame of audio that you want as your “pip” sound.
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Verdoni Philippe
August 2, 2005 at 10:21 pmSince I am using the French issue of Premiere Pro 1.5 , I may not have understood well what you call a Countdown leader; to me it
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