Willie Toth
Forum Replies Created
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I am not really sure I understanding your terminology when you say “outward or inward” but I am thinking you talking about “fade in and fade out” and I believe that “zero crossing” sounds like they are looking to set a limit on the wave so it doesn’t peak … I like to use hard limit but if the file is hot already then I will normalize, I like to use -.1 … On your fade in and outs just highlight a small portion usually less than 1 sec. On the beginning do a fade in and on the end do a fade out … Hope this helps … If I didn’t answer your question then it might be suggested to ask your client exactly what they are refering to …. WILLIE
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You may be onto something with creating a “paying market” for Audition … I did think that Adobe would do a better job on Soundbooth but it is obvious to me whoever laid out the vision for the program doesn’t have a clue of what a good audio editing program is about ……. WILLIE
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This is all well and good if you are going to do a lot of voice overs and have the extra money to spend … Most camcorders have an OK condenser mic and anything lacking in depth can be EQ’d in … I am all for getting great equipment and I think this post is certainly an asset, but it’s always nice to have the option to use what you already have … The one thing that is inportant to know here is that you will have to purchase a mic in the 150+ range anything lower isn’t much better than the camcorder mic … So I guess it comes down to use what you have or spend a couple hundred on a new piece of equipment that going to give you negligible results …………. WILLIE
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OK, do you currently have a mixing board and preferably a large diaphragm mic? If so what I do is view the video on one screen while recording into Audition … The reason you need a mixer or at least a preamp is because you don’t get enough gain plugging the mic directly into the computer … If you don’t have mic’s and mixer you can record from your camcorder directly into Pre Pro using your camcorder (via firewire) as the link … Just put your camcorder in record mode, (you don’t actually have to record with the camcorder just have it set to the record option) open the capture screen and hit record just like you would do if you were to capture from your camcorder … I would make sure that you are close enough to the camcorder with your camcorder gain about 50% this way you have a better chance of not picking up any ambient room noise ……… WILLIE
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I haven’t tried but because Adobe has created Soundbooth, (what a laugh) as the default audio editor for the CS3 package it may not … See if you can access through adobe bridge, personally after I edit the seqence I export the audio fix what I need to in audition then replace the original audio with edited version
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I can help much better if you would e-mail me the clip direct, e-mail to loganonestudio@aol.com … Email it as a .wav file and send about a minute … I believe it’s repairable but before I send you down that road let me make sure …………. WILLIE
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It may sound complicated but as I said it isn’t … This is a normal way that, (at least I would) isolate the channels in a stereo track … Audition gives you the option of just mixing down to mono but you mixdown both tracks into one ………… WILLIE
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Not sure you have the right form, this Adobe Audition which is an audio program
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Willie Toth
August 1, 2007 at 12:55 pm in reply to: Help. Session mutes some tracks, when using solo on othersWhat version are you using? Sounds like it might be 2.0 … I have not seen this problem before so I am a bit clueless here … Have you tried to uninstall and reinstall? WILLIE
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You may be able to remove it but it may be at the cost of degrading the audio you want to keep … I would have to hear a sample … If you would like you can E-mail a minute or so and then I can tell you if you are out of luck or if you can at least get it to the point that you can live with it … E-mail a sample to loganonestudio@aol.com … WILLIE