The Audacity Window
The Audacity Window
The Audacity Window
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/manual-1.2/tutorial_ed_beginner3.html
For now, let's say we want to cut out a bit in the middle. First we've got to select it.
Making a selection
To select the part you wish to cut, copy or paste to, use the selection tool
activated, do so now by clicking on it in the toolbar.
. If it's not
Now press and hold the left mouse button while you drag the mouse to mark an area.
This area is darker than the surrounding area of the clip. Note, that even though you can mark an
area larger than or extending beyond the actual audio clip in the track, the operations will only
work on the actual clip. Playback however will work outside the clip.
Press the space bar to listen to the audio in the marked area.
To extend or contract your selection, hold down the SHIFT button and click on the area you
wish your selection to extend or contract to.
If you click at a spot that is on the right hand side from the middle of the current selection, you
will set the right hand boundary of your new selection.
or press CTRL+X.
After the cut
To undo this operation, select Undo in the Edit menu or press CTRL+Z
Copy will copy the selection to the clipboard.
You can then paste that data back in to any track by clicking where you want this audio to be
inserted and select Paste in the Edit menu,
or press CTRL+V.
Thus pasting is the opposite of cutting. You can also copy material, make another selection with
the mouse and then paste. This will replace the selected material with the contents of the
clipboard, no matter how short or long either of them are.
during all operations of this kind, the bottom row of the screen will display two things, namely
the start time and the end time of your selection. The display to the left if that called "Project
rate:" and its value, defaulting to 44100, can be changed by clicking on that number and
selecting another from the drop-down menu. This sets the sample rate of everything you produce
in audacity.
All files, no matter which will be played at the project rate, and exported at that rate. Should the
sample rate of a track be different from the Project Rate, these tracks will be resampled to the
Project Rate as the project is played back or exported.
Audacity will not change the sample rate of any imported audio. If you want to change the rate
of an imported track for any reason this can be done using the Rate option on the track pop-down
menu.
Silencing unwanted sources
This operation flattens the selection. It essentially is a cut operation without deleting the
selection completely. After all, if you cut a second away, nothing remains. Using the Silence
operation will still leave you with a flatlined area.
When silencing parts between vocal lines, please keep in mind that a sudden drop in background
ambiance can have an bad effect, so at the very least fade the area around the silenced part, to
minimize that effect. Rules to start with are, fade in quickly and fade out slowly.
Alternately, use the envelope tool to lower the volume in that area. That way, you can
comfortably change it later.
Keyboard Shortcut : CTRL+L
Duplicate
The selected area gets copied, a new track is created and the copied material is pasted in to that
new track at the same point in the timeline.
To illustrate, here's the image from the menu reference:
The benefits of a duplicate are many. One of these is experimentation with effects.
Some of you may say "I can do that with the original track too". But you can't change the
volume of your effect and original audio separately. If you put some Reverb on to your audio,
you can only lower that processed audio in volume later on. If you duplicate the audio first and
use the reverb on that(with 100% reverb and 0% original signal), you can freely change the
volume for both the original and reverb signal.
Also, you can do weird and wonderful things to your duplicates to create special effects. You'll
have two pieces of the same audio to work with. Silence parts, reverb another, phase a third,
filter another and see how that sounds. It is so easy to duplicate a piece of audio and do weird
things to it, so try it. Combining sounds produces magic.
A special note on performance :
The new piece of audio isn't actually copied on the hard disk. Audacity will still play from the
original audio file(s) until you change a piece of it.
Keyboard Shortcut : CTRL+D
Split
This performs the same as Duplicate, but it also silences the selected material, after copying it to
a new track. Again, here's the illustration from the menu reference:
There are plenty of good uses for this function, but I'm not going to tell you about them here.
You'll have to go to the next part for the meat of this tutorial.
Keyboard Shortcut : CTRL+Y
Select
Then the split function is used to pop the selected audio to a new track
Split
Use the solo button of the tracks for this. Then listen them both in the mix. Again, you can use the solo buttons fo
If you have a lot of other tracks playing at the same time, press the solo buttons on both tracks. There should be n
When you're satisfied, fade out the last two thirds of the overlapping upper part of the track, and fade in the first
Mixing it back together again
!!!Remember!!!
The final mix is done with the Export as WAV function in the File Menu. Here we'll be looking
at creating submixes with the Quick Mix function.
You've done a lot of edits and now have dozens of little tracks with little bits and pieces here and
there. It might look like this: