Thanks for watching. I wish that I knew the answer for that, but have never done podcasts. This program sort of "ducks" the music and loud tracks to make the voices more understandable. I am very pleased with it, but not sure if it would work for what you want. I think that they give a free trial.
Back in college while earning my BS in Broadcasting (1999-2000) we used Cool Edit Pro for audio editing. I loved it! It was SO much better than cutting and splicing reel to reel tape! I just looked and Cool Edit Pro was bought by Adobe and renamed to Adobe Audition. My career goal was to be an "Audio Engineer", but that went nowhere. For (digital) video editing we had a "Casablanca" machine. It was pretty easy to use, but seems it went the way of the dinosaur! I do have one video produced on that Casablanca uploaded to TH-cam (though I think I had to capture that video off of VHS, so it wouldn't be original quality).
Interesting! I actually still use Adobe Audition 3 for the narrations before importing them to Resolve 18. I'm sure that Resolve is very capable of processing it, but I think that Audition is simpler because it's what I know, and I already have the compression and EQ presets at the touch of a button.
If it was on the voices of the cats, it may have been clipping on the recording itself, which there would have been nothing I could do about it without a declipper. Part of it was not knowing what I was doing too. I have made several uploads since and they seem to have gotten better. The program itself will not allow it to clip. It runs it as close to the line as you can get it so that if you look at the stats for nerds on TH-cam gets you as close to 100% as you can get without penalty. Yes, it is expensive, and I believe it went up. They gave me a survey and when I mentioned that they locked my price in at the original price that I paid. It is a real Time Saver.
It has a mix volume for each time line, and how obvious you want the ducking to be. I probably had the voice over /narration time line set too high. It's cool because you can listen after making adjustments. I'm still learning. There's so many areas to improve upon, but I like the challenge.
Thanks for watching! Please click the thumbs up button if you enjoyed!
I'd like to use it for podcasting. How well does this program do to combat mic bleed when several people are talking into different mics?
Thanks for watching. I wish that I knew the answer for that, but have never done podcasts. This program sort of "ducks" the music and loud tracks to make the voices more understandable. I am very pleased with it, but not sure if it would work for what you want. I think that they give a free trial.
Back in college while earning my BS in Broadcasting (1999-2000) we used Cool Edit Pro for audio editing. I loved it! It was SO much better than cutting and splicing reel to reel tape! I just looked and Cool Edit Pro was bought by Adobe and renamed to Adobe Audition. My career goal was to be an "Audio Engineer", but that went nowhere.
For (digital) video editing we had a "Casablanca" machine. It was pretty easy to use, but seems it went the way of the dinosaur! I do have one video produced on that Casablanca uploaded to TH-cam (though I think I had to capture that video off of VHS, so it wouldn't be original quality).
Interesting! I actually still use Adobe Audition 3 for the narrations before importing them to Resolve 18. I'm sure that Resolve is very capable of processing it, but I think that Audition is simpler because it's what I know, and I already have the compression and EQ presets at the touch of a button.
the tickle monster
Really a time saver but also very expensive. I did feel the voice was clipping a bit too be honest but I guess that could be adjusted a bit.
If it was on the voices of the cats, it may have been clipping on the recording itself, which there would have been nothing I could do about it without a declipper. Part of it was not knowing what I was doing too. I have made several uploads since and they seem to have gotten better. The program itself will not allow it to clip. It runs it as close to the line as you can get it so that if you look at the stats for nerds on TH-cam gets you as close to 100% as you can get without penalty. Yes, it is expensive, and I believe it went up. They gave me a survey and when I mentioned that they locked my price in at the original price that I paid. It is a real Time Saver.
@@themostlymikeshow I mean the voice of the voice-over sounds too loud/ Clipping but other than that it is really amazing.
It has a mix volume for each time line, and how obvious you want the ducking to be. I probably had the voice over /narration time line set too high. It's cool because you can listen after making adjustments. I'm still learning. There's so many areas to improve upon, but I like the challenge.
Nice
Thanks for watching Junior Technology Corner!
I agree, I wish it was native within Davinci and not a standalone app. I want a faster workflow, not more things to slow it down 😞
Yes, they should make a legacy edition of the original. Thanks for watching.
watch out mike.
Watch out for what?
@@themostlymikeshow me.
I use DaVinci as well it a good program
It was a pretty big learning curve from Adobe Premiere Elements, but there's so much more that you can do with Resolve. Every project gets easier.