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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy Voice over tool in FCP

  • Voice over tool in FCP

    Posted by Sarah Levitt on November 16, 2007 at 10:13 am

    Hi !

    I want to start using the voice over tool in the FCP, but I have never done it before (up till now, I have been recording the mini dv tape and digitizing…the good ‘ol way). But since I don’t have a camera at the moment, and I need to record some voice over, and I heard about this feature in FCP, but I don’t know anything about it. Is it any good? Is it a good substitute? Does it depend more on whether my mic is good or not? And is recording directly to the Hard drive, is this considered a good option? I am really green on this subject…:-)

    Thanks !

    Sarah

    Sarah A. Levitt
    http://www.sarahabalevitt.com

    Chris Poisson replied 18 years, 6 months ago 5 Members · 10 Replies
  • 10 Replies
  • Itamar Kool

    November 16, 2007 at 11:31 am

    Well it works OK. But first you have to take a good look into the manual, bacause it has a strange procedure. Als what I experienced is, that you have to look up the file in your media to really hear it

    Kool En De Anderen
    MAC Pro 8 core/Kona LHe/Apple FCS 2/Adobe PPCS3/Huge fibrechannel
    http://www.koolendeanderen.nl

  • Rafael Amador

    November 16, 2007 at 11:36 am

    The quality depends on the signal with which you feed FC. You can just plug a USD mic, or a balanced signal coming from a mixer through a card.
    When you use the Voice Over tool you record your audio with the quality set in your sequence. The default is 48Khz-16bits, but you can record even 96Khz-24bits.
    Rafael

  • Sarah Levitt

    November 16, 2007 at 11:49 am

    Hi Rafael,

    Thanks for you answer, would you say that this is a good/ok/horrible feature in the FCP. Would you use it yourself?

    Thanks,
    Sarah

    Sarah A. Levitt
    http://www.sarahabalevitt.com

  • Rafael Amador

    November 16, 2007 at 2:30 pm

    If depends of the mic you use and whereand how you set it. If you get a clean signal, nobody can tell if has been recorded in FC or with a more profesional tool or device.
    I have used the voice over tool to record draft locutions. With the microphone in the same room of the computer etc. But if you can put the microphone a monitor and a headphone for the audio return in a room with good acoustic conditions, , you can put the voice-over to whatever kind of film you want.
    rafael

  • Sarah Levitt

    November 16, 2007 at 3:08 pm

    Hi rafael,
    yeah I just tried it now with my compter’s microphone and it came out pretty ok (yeah it’s important to be in a quiet room). But what kind or brand of microphone would you reccomment for this type of recording? It will be on the web, and maybe later turned into a DVD.

    Thanks for all your help!
    Sarah

    Sarah A. Levitt
    http://www.sarahabalevitt.com

  • Sarah Levitt

    November 16, 2007 at 3:08 pm

    Hi rafael,
    yeah I just tried it now with my compter’s microphone and it came out pretty ok (yeah it’s important to be in a quiet room). But what kind or brand of microphone would you reccomment for this type of recording? It will be on the web, and maybe later turned into a DVD.

    Thanks for all your help!
    Sarah

    Sarah A. Levitt
    http://www.sarahabalevitt.com

  • Al Davis

    November 16, 2007 at 3:50 pm

    Sarah,

    The key to using the VO tool is a good mike (as in any situation); and a proper setting. I have used this with good success; however I found it impossible to do on my main editing suite, which runs a G5 with 1,000 internal fans (go intel). As a solution, I do this in another area using my MacBook Pro laptop. The results have been as good as the room I am in.

    Good luck

    Al Davis
    Visual Velocity
    Brookline, MA

  • Rafael Amador

    November 16, 2007 at 4:40 pm

    Hi Sarah,
    Al is giving you a good advising.
    About the mic, I have used the mic of my DVCam. Is quite direccional and do not pick much noise around. I tried with a USB mic, but was too sensible picking lot of noise and being very difficult to keep at the correct distance.
    Rafael

  • Sarah Levitt

    November 16, 2007 at 6:19 pm

    Thank you very much!

    Have a nice weekend, where ever you are,
    Sarah

    Sarah A. Levitt
    http://www.sarahabalevitt.com

  • Chris Poisson

    November 18, 2007 at 10:45 pm

    Sarah,

    I use the QuickTime audio recording function with an iMic USB fixture, I just plug in my camera mic. It is painless and quick.

    Have a wonderful day.

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