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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Any way to create an audio echo to a clip ?

  • Any way to create an audio echo to a clip ?

    Posted by John Mayer on September 19, 2012 at 12:24 am

    I’ve tried some filters and I can’t figure most of them. I want to create simple echoes that goes to the end of clips. I tried reverb filter which is the nearest effect but the thing completely stop when the clip end, which is not what I want, I want it to echoe at the end of the clip.

    tia

    Marko Kezele replied 10 years, 7 months ago 5 Members · 6 Replies
  • 6 Replies
  • Dennis Radeke

    September 19, 2012 at 12:46 am

    Assuming you have Audition, send the audio from PRemiere Pro to Audition then go Effect>Delay and Echo>Delay. There are some presets to start with if you’re not sure what you’re tweaking.

    In Premiere Pro, you can apply the delay effect to audio and adjust as needed.

  • John Mayer

    September 19, 2012 at 7:02 am

    Yeah but that’s what I’m saying about adding effect in premiere, as soon I add the Delay/reverb filter, if it the end of the clip it doesn’t do anything and I kinda want to a sound abruptly stop, but the reverb continue for a few seconds.

    Maybe I am doing it wrong, it is not very clear how to use it.

    I don’t know about Audition but I have to do this for like a dozen of clips for a montage mash up.

  • Dennis Radeke

    September 19, 2012 at 2:08 pm

    I guess try to add silence to the end of the clip in order to get the echo out the way you want it. You might want to file that as either a feature request or bug.

  • Jeff Pulera

    September 19, 2012 at 5:10 pm

    It’s going to be impossible to have an echo continue past the end of the clip because…the clip ended. What you can do is position the Work Area bar over your clip in the timeline, but extend it a few seconds past the end of the clip, then Export as a .wav file, then bring that into timeline, THEN apply your audio effect and the new audio clip now has extra space beyond the original ending point, into which an echo could continue. I think this is what Dennis was getting at.

    Before exporting clip, you might want to add a quick fade at the end so it doesn’t cut off abruptly, depends on the source and desired result of course.

    Thanks

    Jeff Pulera
    Safe Harbor Computers

  • Ben Minton

    September 7, 2015 at 9:28 pm

    Or create a new composition with the sound clip inside it, making sure the it’s length is longer than the clip. Then apply the reverb to the composition, and it will extend the effect to the full length of the comp even after the original clip has ended. No need to export.

  • Marko Kezele

    October 5, 2015 at 3:01 pm

    Or just apply reverb effect to the channel with that clip in audio track mixer

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