Audacity
Audacity
Audacity
Audacity offers many tools which allow the user to play all or part of a sound. There are
also many recording options.
The easiest way to control Audacity playback and recording is with the Control Toolbar:
This offers buttons (from left to right in the image above) for Pause, Standard Speed Play/Loop-
Play, Stop, Skip to Start, Skip to End, Record/Append-Record (record at the end of a track).
Transcription Toolbar allows a constant playback speed to be set which is slower or faster than
normal. Envelope Tool on the Tools Toolbar, when used in conjunction with a Time Track, allows a
speed envelope to be drawn which can increase or decrease playback speed over the length of the
audio.
Keyboard Shortcuts
There are several keyboard shortcuts you can use that work exactly the same as the buttons in the
Control Toolbar:
Key Action
P Pause
Spacebar Play or Stop
L or SHIFT + Spacebar Loop-Play
Home Skip to Start
End Skip to End
R Record
SHIFT + R Append-Record
The playback level meter in the Meter Toolbar will show you the overall volume of all of your tracks
when mixed together.
Playback
Play Regions
The current region being played is indicated by arrows in the Timeline. For example in the figure
below, the play region is from 15 to 45 seconds.
During playback, a green triangle indicates the current playback position - in this example, at about
the 25 second mark (second figure below).
You can easily play by clicking and dragging in the Ruler to create a play region! That's a great way
to play without modifying the selection. If you do modify the selection or the play region after
playback has begun, it does not affect the active play region. The audio will stop whenever it would
have based on the play region when playback began.
Key Action
1 Play One Second
B Play To Selection
C Play Cut Preview
Press 1 while the mouse is pointing to a particular time, and you will hear 1 second of audio centered
at that time. For example, position the mouse at 1.0 seconds and press 1 , and you will hear the time
range from 0.5 to 1.5 seconds (below).
Suppose you've selected a range of audio (above), and you want to make sure it's exactly what you
want to cut out. In order to determine whether you've selected exactly the right range of audio, you
can not only listen to the selection, but you can listen to the audio before and after the selection. If
you press the spacebar, you'll hear the whole selection (indicated by the playback region shown in
the ruler) (below).
The "B" key lets you play the audio from the mouse to the selection - what you get depends on
where the mouse pointer is. Move the mouse to a part of the audio you're interested in hearing, and
press B, without clicking the mouse button (the first through the fourth figures below).
If the mouse pointer is to the left of the selection and you press B, you'll hear the audio up to the
selection.
If the mouse pointer is inside the left side of the selection and you press B, you'll hear the first part of
the selection up to the mouse pointer.
If the mouse pointer is inside the right side of the selection and you press B, you'll hear from the
mouse pointer to the end of the selection.
Finally if the mouse pointer is to the right of the selection and you press B, you'll hear from the
selection to the mouse pointer.
Press the C key to hear 1 second of audio before and then 1 second of audio after the selection - as if
the selection was deleted (below). You can change the length of the audio that is played before and
after the selection in the Playback Preferences tab.
You may customize all keyboard shortcuts! Change of them using the Keyboard tab of
the Preferences.
Recording
Setting Up
1. Connect your input source to your computer and verify that you are getting sound into your
computer using your computer's sound input control panel or the custom mixer application that
came with your particular sound card.
2. Tell Audacity which source you have selected to record from.
3. Set the recording level using the input slider on the Mixer Toolbar while watching the
indications in the recording level meter on the Meter Toolbar.
1. If you computer's sound control panel supports sending the audio input to the computer's audio
output then make this setting there.
2. If that is not possible, click on Transport > Software Playthrough (on/off) so that it is checked.
Detailed step by step instructions for setting up for recording are provided in the Your First
Recording tutorial.
Every time you click the Record button on the Control Toolbar Audacity will create a new track and
begin recording on that track from the current cursor position. There is no need to create a new track
before starting to record. If you want recording to start from the beginning of the new track, click the
"Skip to Start" button on the Control Toolbar.
1. Instead of clicking the Stop button to end recording, click the Pause button to pause recording.
Click the Pause button again to continue recording.
2. Select the track you want add the recording to and, while holding down the SHIFT key, click
the Record button. This is called "Append Record".
Overdubbing
You can record a new track while listening to previously-recorded tracks. This is called overdubbing.
To set up for overdubbing, make sure that "Overdub (on/off)" is checked in the "Tracks" menu.
Timer Recording
Yet another way to record is using the Timer Record dialog, found in the Transport Menu.
Use it to start recording later, or to record for a certain duration before stopping.
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