as someone whose intro to editing audio began with scissors, exacto knives and tape, I hold a deeeep appreciation of the swipe of a mouse ! thank YOU, Mike ~ best to ✨Miss Izabella
If you've watched this awesome video and can't wait to use it, but you also have some weird localization (eq. Czech) of Audacity and therefore you can't find it in the Effect menu, it can be hidden under the publishers' name "Steve Daulton" or "Paul Licameli" and can have a little bit weird name ('cause why not to play hide and seek, just translate it weirdly and and store it randomly). ^^ Anyway thanks again for great video. :)
Thank you for watching! I recommend the beyerdynamic DT770 PRO X headphones for podcasting, they provide excellent sound quality and comfort for long recording sessions.
No problem! DaVinci Resolve is cool, but it’s not exactly Adobe Audition when it comes to spectral features. There are some other free options, though-just gotta dig around a bit!
You didn't mention that you can adjust the time window (window size) of the spectrogram depending what you need to do - there's a tradeoff between time resolution and frequency resolution, so you can adjust this window to best suit what you're looking for.
Thank you for pointing that out! Adjusting the time window in Audacity's spectrogram allows for greater customization and precision in your spectral editing tasks.
Hello Mike. About 3 months ago, I asked you for a training content about the professional effects that should be applied to make a long documentary voice-over sound more professional on Adobe Audition. I hope you haven't forgotten, I need this so bad Mike, I will continue to follow you. 🙂
When I cut and rerecord most of the time there is a little static noise its really hard to remove for some reason.. Hard to describe if you just delete it you can still hear where the one clip ends and the other one begins with this noise. Does that makes sense? :D
Absolutely! It sounds like you're dealing with crossfading issues when cutting and re-recording. Have you tried using Audacity's Spectral Editing tool to visually identify and remove those unwanted noises?
@@MikeRussell you know I just read up on it and you’re right. 2021 it was a badly written terms and conditions that they clarified. I stand corrected. Thank you.
as someone whose intro to editing audio began with scissors, exacto knives and tape, I hold a deeeep appreciation of the swipe of a mouse !
thank YOU, Mike ~ best to ✨Miss Izabella
Thank you so much for your kind words!
Great video and helpful. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
If you've watched this awesome video and can't wait to use it, but you also have some weird localization (eq. Czech) of Audacity and therefore you can't find it in the Effect menu, it can be hidden under the publishers' name "Steve Daulton" or "Paul Licameli" and can have a little bit weird name ('cause why not to play hide and seek, just translate it weirdly and and store it randomly). ^^
Anyway thanks again for great video. :)
Thanks!
Thank you so much, Mike. I learned a lot.
You're very welcome! I'm glad I could provide some valuable insights into the power of Audacity's spectral editing tools.
Dear Mike thank you for this video. Do you have any recommendation about a headphone for podcast ?
Thank you for watching! I recommend the beyerdynamic DT770 PRO X headphones for podcasting, they provide excellent sound quality and comfort for long recording sessions.
@@MikeRussell thank you Mike for your kind reply 🙏
thank you Mike... does davinci resolve free or other free daws have something as good as adobe audition spectral features?
No problem! DaVinci Resolve is cool, but it’s not exactly Adobe Audition when it comes to spectral features. There are some other free options, though-just gotta dig around a bit!
Thank you Mike!
You bet!
You're welcome! I'm glad you found the tutorial helpful!
You didn't mention that you can adjust the time window (window size) of the spectrogram depending what you need to do - there's a tradeoff between time resolution and frequency resolution, so you can adjust this window to best suit what you're looking for.
Thank you for pointing that out! Adjusting the time window in Audacity's spectrogram allows for greater customization and precision in your spectral editing tasks.
Hello Mike. About 3 months ago, I asked you for a training content about the professional effects that should be applied to make a long documentary voice-over sound more professional on Adobe Audition. I hope you haven't forgotten, I need this so bad Mike, I will continue to follow you. 🙂
Hi there! Thank you for your patience - I haven't forgotten your request 😊
This is great Mike. I think better than Adobe audition. Spectral edit multi tool isn't there in Audition.
Thank you for the feedback! Audacity's spectral editing tool can definitely offer some pretty unique features.
Manually will take forever with silibance in an audiobook chapter. What is more of an automated way?
When I cut and rerecord most of the time there is a little static noise its really hard to remove for some reason.. Hard to describe if you just delete it you can still hear where the one clip ends and the other one begins with this noise. Does that makes sense? :D
Absolutely! It sounds like you're dealing with crossfading issues when cutting and re-recording. Have you tried using Audacity's Spectral Editing tool to visually identify and remove those unwanted noises?
@@MikeRussell Thank you for your reply! I have but its just annoyingly difficult to make the cut sound "ok" , but doable, thanks :)
The moment when you relize Audiacity has a specrogram view while Fairlight in Resolve doesn't 😂😅
Yeah I know, it's crazy what gems we can stumble upon in Audacity, right?
Thank you
You're welcome!
Reaper.
Reaper is another fantastic audio editing software option with powerful features for spectral editing and more!
Besides being spyware?
Audacity's spectral editing features are a powerful tool for audio production regardless of any unsubstantiated privacy concerns.
@@MikeRussell you know I just read up on it and you’re right. 2021 it was a badly written terms and conditions that they clarified. I stand corrected. Thank you.