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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Restoring Original Clip Audio…

  • Restoring Original Clip Audio…

    Posted by Jeffrey Gould on April 3, 2006 at 6:22 pm

    Hi, using Premiere Pro 2 and used “edit in Audition”, but I over did the Noise Reduction a tad and wanted to revert to the original audio…is this possible? Thanks

    Jeffrey S. Gould
    Action Media Productions

    Jeffrey Gould replied 20 years, 1 month ago 4 Members · 5 Replies
  • 5 Replies
  • Mike Velte

    April 4, 2006 at 11:50 am

    Unlike Premiere, Audition and Photoshop are destructive editing tools…You should have exported a copy of the audio from Premiere for audition to work with.

  • Marisu Fronc

    April 4, 2006 at 12:44 pm

    Jeffrey-

    Offline the clip and recapture it – NEXT time export to audition!

    slainte,
    marisu

  • Jeffrey Gould

    April 4, 2006 at 2:27 pm

    Isn’t that what “edit in audition” is? If so…that is what I did. I noticed there are additional audio files in my bin that are just the effected files, would I have to unlink the audio/video and manually replace the original audio. A revert to function would be helpful. Thanks.

    Jeffrey S. Gould
    Action Media Productions

  • Dave Friend

    April 4, 2006 at 9:25 pm

    Jeffery,

    If you match frame the clip from the timeline to the source viewer and then edit it back into the timeline the original audio will be restored. You must match frame to the master clip not the reference clip in the timeline. To do that all you have to do is park the timeline cursor somewhere in the clip (do not use the double-click method to match frame the clip) and make sure the track of interest is targeted – then press the T key. You can now mark in/out points on the timeline and overlay edit the clip back into the timeline. The original audio from the capture should be used.

    This might fail if you sent the master clip from the bin to Audition instead of a reference clip from the timeline to Audition. I don’t know that for sure as I haven’t tried it. I have used the method described above many times.

    BTW, you know you have a reference clip in the source viewer when the name of the clip (as shown in the tab on the source viewer) includes the name of the timeline before the clip’s name, i.e. “The Big Show: closeup of star.avi”. A master clip would only have the file name.

    Hope this helps.

    Dave

  • Jeffrey Gould

    April 4, 2006 at 9:50 pm

    Dave, I can’t thank you enough for your info. I appreciate the time you took to reply. I’ll give it a shot tonite. Adobe definitely needs to work on a revert function to undo the Audition effect. Thanks again.

    Jeffrey S. Gould
    Action Media Productions

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