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  • Audio Mastering Help

    Posted by Marc Dejesus on January 12, 2009 at 6:28 am

    Hi,

    If anybody can help, it would be greatly appreciated.

    I shot an interview with a wired mic connected to the input2 on my JVC HD200.

    I used premiere cs3 to edit the footage in Stereo. Also used music to mix in with my footage.

    Upon mastering to DVD, I find that since the interview was recorded through the camera’s input 2, the Master Audio Meters in premiere only show the right channel picking up the audio.

    Therefore, the master audio only contains the interview signal on the right channel and for those who may hook up their DVD player and only plug in the Left audio channel, the interview will not be heard.

    My question, is there a way to get the “Right Channel Only” recorded interview audio track on both the Left and Right Master Audio Track??? I know in Avid Xpress, there is a button called “all tracks centered” which allows the audio signals on all tracks (regardless of which input channel the audio was recorded on) to come out as equal on both the Left and Right Master audio tracks.

    Thank you in advance for any help thrown my way.

    Jon Barrie replied 17 years, 4 months ago 4 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Paul Patton

    January 12, 2009 at 11:05 am

    the interview audio needs a filter added. use the fill right audio filter. this should give you what you want.

  • Eddie Lotter

    January 12, 2009 at 6:06 pm

    [marc dejesus] “My question, is there a way to get the “Right Channel Only” recorded interview audio track on both the Left and Right Master Audio Track???”

    See: FAQ:How do I create mono/stereo out of stereo/mono audio?

    Cheers
    Eddie

  • Marc Dejesus

    January 13, 2009 at 9:01 am

    THANKS…. the fill right filter worked… although its quite a pain.. cause i have to apply it now to every single edit.. but thanks for both your responses.. you guys rock.

  • Jon Barrie

    January 13, 2009 at 10:15 am

    if you use the audio mixer you can apply a fill effect to the entire audio track and anything that is in that track will use the effect/s applied to that track via the audio mixer. that will save you heaps of time.
    – Jon 🙂

    Jon Barrie
    aJBprods
    http://www.jonbarrie.net

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