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Audacity Manual Title Page
Welcome to the
v1.2
Manual
Want to know
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Introduction Tutorials Reference What's New FAQ Credits
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Experienced users should head down to
in this document.
Audacity ...
a free cross platform audio editor.
For new users to Audacity, see
the Tutorial in five parts for
some basics on digital audio, setting up Audacity, selecting, aligning, and recording.
Audacity is currently in version 1.2.3. This is a stable release of Audacity; it has been tested and works well for most people. However, it comes with no guarantee, and we depend on your feedback in order to continue to improve on it. Please check our website for the latest version. Audacity is a collaborative project, so there are lots of opportunities for you to get involved if you're interested!
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
What can you do with Audacity?
What can't Audacity do?
Audacity is a program that manipulates digital audio waveforms. In addition to recording sounds directly from within the program, it imports many sound file formats, including
, and
. PCM formats of 8,16,24 and 32−bits can be imported and exported.
Although Audacity is a very powerful audio editor that works with an unlimited number tracks of virtually unlimited size, it cannot do everything. It cannot :
•
Audacity cannot record more than two channels at once on many systems. Some support for multitrack recording is included in version 1.2.3, but it does not support very many systems yet.
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• apply
to any part of a
• sound built−in
• customizable
for audio
• analysis applications
for every track, which is live−resampled to the project
• sample rate simple to complex
for tracks and groups of tracks
How does it work − a quick intro for experienced users
•
Audacity opens MIDI files, but it is not a
MIDI editor, and its MIDI features are extremely limited.
Audacity works with tracks, that contain one audio file. This file is editable and all actions are undoable. Undo's are instantaneous.
There is volume automation via the tool
.
Editing functions include
Almost anything is undoable, including importing
,
Duplicate (to new track at same timecode),
and deleting tracks!
(to new track at same timecode), and
.
There are no inserts, auxes or buses yet.
A grid can be activated for each track, and snapping can be switched on as well.
All versions can use LADSPA plugins, and the
Windows and Mac versions can use VST plugins using the VST Enabler (a separate download).
What makes Audacity unique?
•
Audacity is free and the source code is available under the GNU General Public License.
•
Audacity is cross−platform − it runs on Windows (98 through XP), Mac OS X, and many
•
Unix platforms, including Linux. Previous versions worked with Mac OS 9.
No limits on the number of tracks or the length of any track, except the size of your hard disk.
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•
Import almost anything: WAV, AIFF, Next/AU, IRCAM, MP3, and Ogg Vorbis files are supported natively, but Audacity will also open just about any uncompressed sound file and
• automatically deduce the format (using the
feature).
Audacity not only includes many high−quality effects built−in, but also lets you use
LADSPA and VST plug−in effects. There are dozens of free, shareware, and commercial
• plug−ins online that do everything from Reverb to Noise Reduction.
Audacity supports plug−ins written in the Nyquist programming language, a high−level
• language designed specifically for working with audio.
Audacity acts like a non−destructive editor, providing multiple levels of undo, but it also writes changes made to the audio to disk, eliminating the need for complicated real−time
• processing.
Label tracks allow you to annotate waveforms (for example, transcribing speech) and later
• export the waveforms to a text file.
Powerful spectral features allow you to view waveforms as spectrograms or plot the power
• spectrum of any region of audio, and even export this data to a spreadsheet.
Pitch−changing and tempo−changing effects
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Credits
The Audacity manual was written by Anthony Oetzmann, with major contributions by Dominic
Mazzoni.
Anthony Oetzmann is the primary documentation writer for Audacity. He wrote most of the manual you are reading now, and has also influenced the program design significantly. He is a professional audio engineer who lives and works in Germany.
Dominic Mazzoni is the Audacity project leader and Audacity's primary programmer. He began the project while a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA. He is currently a research programmer at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, CA.
The Audacity logo was designed by Harvey Lubin of Agrapha.
For a list of all of the people who contributed to Audacity, and for up−to−date contact information for Tony, Dominic, and other contributors, please visit our website at: http://audacity.sourceforge.net
.
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What's New in Audacity 1.2 ??
(History of Audacity)
New features in Audacity 1.2:
User Interface Effects
•
New Mixer toolbar allows you to control the output volume, input volume, and input source directly
• from Audacity.
Every track now has its own gain
• and pan controls.
Uses improved project file format.
•
Block files (stored in Audacity project directories) now use the standard AU format. Though some
Audacity meta−information is in these files, they can now be read by many other popular audio programs
• as well.
Import RAW has a simpler GUI but support for far more file formats.
The autodetection algorithms are
• much more accurate than in 1.0.
Using high quality resampling algorithms, with the option of better
•
Repeat Last Effect command.
•
Support for LADSPA plug−ins on all
• platforms.
VST support now comes through an optional LADSPA plug−in called the
•
VST Enabler.
Most effects now have a Preview
• button.
Compressor (Dynamic Range
•
Compressor).
Change Pitch (without changing
• tempo).
Change Tempo (without changing
• pitch).
Change Speed (changing both pitch
• and tempo).
Repeat (useful for creating loops).
•
Normalize (adjust volume and DC bias).
quality for mixing than for real−time
• playback.
Preliminary support for Time Tracks, for changing playback speed over
Audio I/O
•
1−second preview command (just hit the '1' key on your keyboard).
time.
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•
Vertical zooming of tracks.
•
Improved look and placement of
• toolbars.
New custom mouse cursors.
•
Complete implementation of editable
• keyboard shortcuts.
Find zero−crossings.
•
Mouse wheel can be used to zoom in
• and out.
Multi−Tool mode.
•
Amplify and fade using envelope.
•
Labels can store selections (like
•
Audacity 1.0.0).
Open multiple files from the same dialog.
New features in Audacity 1.1.1:
•
Looped play (Shift−click on the Play button).
User Interface Mac OS X
•
Tooltips appear in Statusbar.
•
Vertical cursor follows play/record.
•
Pause button.
•
Drawing tool (with three different
• modes).
Vertical Resizing of stereo tracks is
• more fun.
Adjust selection by click−dragging
• selection boundary.
Toolbar button context−sensitive
• enabling/disabling.
Better zooming functionality (centers region).
Unix
•
Support for more audio hardware
•
Support for full−duplex (play while
• recording).
Support for MP3 exporting using
•
LameLib Carbon.
Hardware and Software playthrough support.
•
Audacity now has a man page (it describes command−line options and how to set the search path).
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•
Multiple ways to display the cursor
• position and selection.
Snap−to selection mode.
•
Drag tracks up and down.
•
Align and group align functions.
•
Cursor save/restore.
•
Working history window.
File Formats
•
Uses libsndfile, which fixes some bugs and improves performance.
Allows a wide range of uncompressed audio formats to be imported and exported
Effects
Searching for Files:
•
•
Effects broken down into three menus: Generate, Effect, and
Analyze.
Generate menu lets you generate
• silence, noise, or a tone.
Nyquist support (supports plug−ins written in Nyquist, an interpreted functional language based on Lisp).
Localization
•
On Windows and Mac OS, Audacity now looks for translations in the
"Languages" folder and all plug−ins in the "Plug−ins" folder, relative to
• the program.
On Unix, Audacity looks for translations in <prefix>/share/locale and looks for everything else in
<prefix>/share/audacity and also in any paths in the AUDACITY_PATH environment variable.
•
Improved localization support.
•
More languages available.
•
Language selection dialog on first startup.
New features in Audacity 1.1.0:
New libraries in Audacity 1.1:
• libmad for fast MP3 importing.
• libid3tag for editing MP3 file information.
• libsndfile to read and write more audio file formats.
•
PortAudio for cross−platform audio playing and recording.
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here you'd normally find links to stuff of the same category as the current page
How to use this manual
In this manual you'll find lots of common screen elements, that you can rely on to navigate this manual.
TOP LEFT CORNER −>
Back to the main page . Having trouble with this? Take a nap
and try again.
TOP MIDDLE −> Back to the previous page, in this case probably
BOTTOM MIDDLE −> Back to the previous page, in this case probably
BOTTOM LEFT
CORNER
−>
To reiterate, to get back to the main contents page, check the top−left corner of the page.
To return to the page above the current one in the manual, check the top−middle of the page.
Any stuff that fits in to the same category of the current page is usually available as a link just above the page title and below the link back to the previous page.
That way you can jump around all the tutorial pages that belong together for example.
Keyword search
We don't have one. That's why we have the Index of Terms
. If you don't know where else to look, look here.
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I. Basics
1.
2.
3.
Setup, Audio Import and Playback
4.
II. Editing for Beginners
1.
2.
3.
4.
III. Common Editing Tasks
1.
2.
3.
IV. Effects for Beginners
1.
V. Selecting and Aligning
1.
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How do effects work in Audacity ?
Looking for a description of the stuff in the Effects Menu ?
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Digital Audio Rules of Audacity Setup, Audio Import and Playback Recording with Audacity
Tutorial − I.Basics
Part 1 − Digital Audio − Part 1
What is sound?
Sounds are pressure waves of air. If there wasn't any air, we wouldn't be able to hear sounds. There's no sound in space.
We hear sounds because our ears are sensitive to these pressure waves. Perhaps the easiest type of sound wave to understand is a short, sudden event like a clap. When you clap your hands, the air that was between your hands is pushed aside. This increases the air pressure in the space near your hands, because more air molecules are temporarily compressed into less space. The high pressure pushes the air molecules outwards in all directions at the speed of sound, which is about 340 meters per second.
When the pressure wave reaches your ear, it pushes on your eardrum slightly, causing you to hear the clap.
A hand clap is a short event that causes a single pressure wave that quickly dies out. The image above shows the waveform for a typical hand clap. In the waveform, the horizontal axis represents time, and the vertical axis is for pressure. The initial high pressure is followed by low pressure, but the oscillation quickly dies out.
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The other common type of sound wave is a periodic wave. When you ring a bell, after the initial strike (which is a little like a hand clap), the sound comes from the vibration of the bell. While the bell is still ringing, it vibrates at a particular frequency, depending on the size and shape of the bell, and this causes the nearby air to vibrate with the same frequency. This causes pressure waves of air to travel outwards from the bell, again at the speed of sound. Pressure waves from continuous vibration look more like this:
How is sound recorded?
A microphone consists of a small membrane that is free to vibrate, along with a mechanism that translates movements of the membrane into electrical signals. (The exact electrical mechanism varies depending on the type of microphone.) So acoustical waves are translated into electrical waves by the microphone. Typically, higher pressure corresponds to higher voltage, and vice versa.
A tape recorder translates the waveform yet again − this time from an electrical signal on a wire, to a magnetic signal on a tape. When you play a tape, the process gets performed in reverse, with the magnetic signal transforming into an electrical signal, and the electrical signal causing a speaker to vibrate, usually using an electromagnet.
How is sound recorded digitally ?
Recording onto a tape is an example of analog recording. Audacity deals with digital recordings − recordings that have been sampled so that they can be used by a digital computer, like the one you're using now. Digital recording has a lot of benefits over analog recording. Digital files can be copied
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Audacity Manual Title Page as many times as you want, with no loss in quality, and they can be burned to an audio CD or shared via the Internet. Digital audio files can also be edited much more easily than analog tapes.
The main device used in digital recording is a Analog−to−Digital Converter (ADC). The ADC captures a snapshot of the electric voltage on an audio line and represents it as a digital number that can be sent to a computer. By capturing the voltage thousands of times per second, you can get a very good approximation to the original audio signal:
Each dot in the figure above represents one audio sample. There are two factors that determine the quality of a digital recording:
•
Sample rate: The rate at which the samples are captured or played back, measured in Hertz
(Hz), or samples per second. An audio CD has a sample rate of 44,100 Hz, often written as
44 KHz for short. This is also the default sample rate that Audacity uses, because audio CDs
• are so prevalent.
Sample format or sample size: Essentially this is the number of digits in the digital representation of each sample. Think of the sample rate as the horizontal precision of the digital waveform, and the sample format as the vertical precision. An audio CD has a precision of 16 bits, which corresponds to about 5 decimal digits.
Higher sampling rates allow a digital recording to accurately record higher frequencies of sound. The sampling rate should be at least twice the highest frequency you want to represent. Humans can't hear frequencies above about 20,000 Hz, so 44,100 Hz was chosen as the rate for audio CDs to just include all human frequencies. Sample rates of 96 and 192 KHz are starting to become more common, particularly in DVD−Audio, but many people honestly can't hear the difference.
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Higher sample sizes allow for more dynamic range − louder louds and softer softs. If you are familiar with the decibel (dB) scale, the dynamic range on an audio CD is theoretically about 90 dB, but realistically signals that are −24 dB or more in volume are greatly reduced in quality. Audacity supports two additional sample sizes: 24−bit, which is commonly used in digital recording, and
32−bit float, which has almost infinite dynamic range, and only takes up twice as much storage as
16−bit samples.
Playback of digital audio uses a Digital−to−Analog Converter (DAC). This takes the sample and sets a certain voltage on the analog outputs to recreate the signal, that the Analog−to−Digital Converter originally took to create the sample. The DAC does this as faithfully as possible and the first CD players did only that, which didn't sound good at all. Nowadays DACs use Oversampling to smooth out the audio signal. The quality of the filters in the DAC also contribute to the quality of the recreated analog audio signal. The filter is part of a multitude of stages that make up a DAC.
How does audio get digitized on your computer?
Your computer has a soundcard − it could be a separate card, like a SoundBlaster, or it could be built−in to your computer. Either way, your soundcard comes with an Analog−to−Digital Converter
(ADC) for recording, and a Digital−to−Analog Converter (DAC) for playing audio. Your operating system (Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, etc.) talks to the sound card to actually handle the recording and playback, and Audacity talks to your operating system so that you can capture sounds to a file, edit them, and mix multiple tracks while playing.
Standard file formats for PCM audio
There are two main types of audio files on a computer:
•
PCM stands for Pulse Code Modulation. This is just a fancy name for the technique described above, where each number in the digital audio file represents exactly one sample in the waveform. Common examples of PCM files are WAV files, AIFF files, and
•
Sound Designer II files. Audacity supports WAV, AIFF, and many other PCM files.
The other type is compressed files. Earlier formats used logarithmic encodings to squeeze more dynamic range out of fewer bits for each sample, like the u−law or a−law encoding in the Sun AU format. Modern compressed audio files use sophisticated psychoacoustics
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Audacity Manual Title Page algorithms to represent the essential frequencies of the audio signal in far less space.
Examples include MP3 (MPEG I, layer 3), Ogg Vorbis, and WMA (Windows Media
Audio). Audacity supports MP3 and Ogg Vorbis, but not the proprietary WMA format or the
MPEG4 format (AAC) used by Apple's iTunes.
For details on the audio formats Audacity can import from and export to, please check out the
Fileformats page of this documentation. Please remember that MP3 does not store uncompressed
PCM audio data. When you create an MP3 file, you are deliberately losing some quality in order to use less disk space.
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Digital Audio Rules of Audacity Setup, Audio Import and Playback Recording with Audacity
Tutorial − I.Basics
Part 2 − Rules of Audacity − Part 2
If you'd like to get straight playing an imported file or recording something, you can skip this section and come back later.
Whenever you work with Audacity, there are some rules you should remember:
1. One clip per track
A clip is simply a piece of audio material. Imported, recorded, split or duplicated from another track, one track can only carry one piece of audio at a time. You can extend it by pasting material or inserting silence in to it, or cut a piece away, but it will always be one continuous piece of audio.
2. Audacity always records to a new track
This new track is opened at the bottom. You'll have to zoom out and then resize the track view of the bottom most track to see what is recorded. You can actually use the window sliders at the bottom and right to do this after starting to record, but this way no performance will be lost to the windowing system.
I suggest hitting CTRL+F to get an overview of the entire project as well. This only affects the horizontal zoom by the way(left−right zoom). There is no way to zoom out vertically without using the mouse yet.
3. Edit/Duplicate will not create a new audio file
This may not seem a big deal, but it is if you're editing a large live recording.
What Audacity does is reference the original audio material until you actually perform some kind of edit on it, such as cutting a piece away, or using any effect on it. One thing to remember is the
UNDO function. You can undo/redo stuff as many times as you like, and yes, even after you have
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Audacity Manual Title Page saved your project.
You may ask what happens if you do, for example, cut away a piece or mark off a 30 minute piece and split it to a new track. It only writes changed data to disk. Since Audacity works with chunk of audio data of around one megabyte in size, this happens quite fast. Rest assured that the only big waiting period might be the importing of large audio files.
To further explain how Audacity works, flip to the
Next Part − Setup, Audio Import and Playback
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Digital Audio Rules of Audacity Setup, Audio Import and Playback Recording with Audacity
Tutorial − I.Basics
Part 3 − Setup, Audio Import and Playback − Part 3
1. Create a new project
This is very important!
Audacity writes all the changed and recorded audio to a directory called Projectname_data, which is located right where you saved the project file itself.
Thus, select and choose a location and filename for your project.
Please note that when you startup Audacity fresh, only the " Save As..." menu option is available.
To save your project later on, you can also use the keyboard shortcut : CTRL+S
2. Check the Preferences
Again, this is very important!
Press CTRL+P or go to ...
...then check if the right output is selected :
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...set the sample rate of your choice... (44.1
kHz is the default)
...and here's a crucial screen :
The File Formats settings need discussing at this point.
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When importing uncompressed audio, there are two ways to do it. "Make a copy of the original
before editing" means, that Audacity actually copies the entire audio file that you imported in to its project data directory and in the process sets up the little overview graphics, whose descriptions get stored in the project data directory too.
The second way is to use the original imported audio. You may think we're actually editing this file, but no we aren't. In fact, Audacity will now read the imported file once and simply create the graphics overviews for them in the data directory, and subsequently write to disk all the audio data that you change. The original file is only used for playback. All audio that remains unchanged will be played from the original file.
The advantage of choosing to make a copy of the original is that you avoid trouble, should
anything in the original file change.
For example, should you accidentally delete the original file, you're lost.
You have to make up your mind before you start a project. Choose to make a copy of all imported files, and you'll use more space on your hard disk(s), but it will be easier to back up the project too, because all files that have anything to do with your project will be in the project data directory.
We'll ignore the Spectrogram settings for now. The Directories setting can be ignored as well for now, because all it sets is the directory to use for recordings, undo data and other stuff, if you haven't yet saved your project. Since we already saved our project, this setting is of no importance to us, though you may want to set it properly later on. Initially this is set to a folder called
"audacity_temp_1.2" in the system temporary directory.
3. Import an audio file
There are three ways to do this:
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Audacity Manual Title Page
1. Simply drag and drop the audio file in to the Audacity window. (If you're using Mac OS 9 or X, drag the audio file to the Audacity icon instead...)
2. Select Import Audio ... in the Project menu.
3. Use the keyboard shortcut : CTRL+I
Audacity can import WAV, AIFF, AU, IRCAM, MP3 and OGG files. Please refer to the
fileformats page for further reference on these audio formats.
4. Playback
The imported file should now be displayed in an audio track. The track will look a little like this, depending on what you imported :
Trackpanel and Waveform Overview of the imported Track
If you're not sure where to find audio material, simply rip some off a CD, or in Windows, check the
Media folder in the directory of your Windows installation.
Now click on the green Play button imported.
at the top and you should hear the file you have just
Next part − Recording with Audacity
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Digital Audio Rules of Audacity Setup, Audio Import and Playback Recording with Audacity
Tutorial − I.Basics
Part 4 − Recording with Audacity − Part 4
1. Create a new project
Save an empty project. Or simply use the one from the
. Remember, that if you don't save your project before you start recording or importing, that all recordings, edit and other files will be written to directory set in the Directories preferences.
2. Check the preferences
Make sure your playback and recording device are set. If you're going to record a stereo signal, check the "Record in stereo" checkbox in the Audio I/O preferences.
When picking a device to record from, make sure you've set up all the connections properly, such as plugging a microphone in to the Mic Input, and any other device in to the Line In of your sound card. Then check that the gain level knob(the amount by how much the input should be amplified) of the mixer of your soundcard is set right.
Since most soundcards can mix the inputs back in to the outputs, the easiest way to test your microphone is to speak in to it while playing with your sound card mixer. The sound card mixer is a piece of software either provided by the sound card maker, or by the operating system you're using.
The Windows mixer is pretty straight forward, though some soundcards bring their own along. The
Mac's mixer is controlled via the Sound Control Panel, and the Linux users have a variety of mixer applications at their disposal. Just make sure they work before yelling at your screen that nothing works.
3. Hit Record
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Audacity Manual Title Page
Click on the red Record button
to begin recording.
Click on the blue Pause button
to pause the recording. Press it again to continue.
Click on the yellow Stop button
to cease recording. The cursor will return to its previous position, before the recording was started.
That's it. You can now play around with your recording and explore the editing capabilities of
Audacity. Remember that you can use the Undo function almost without limits.
Proceed to the
section, for a detailed overview of editing functions.
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Audacity Manual Title Page
Introduction Cut,Copy&Paste Silence, Duplicate and Split Splitting and Submixes
II.Editing for Beginners
Part 1 − Introduction − Part 1
Sound Editing in the "real world"
Sound editors clean up dialogue tracks, cut layers of special effects, place sounds at certain times, create ambiance tracks by cutting out unwanted stuff and mixing in interesting or necessary sounds.
Music production engineers may cut pieces of vocals away or shift them to a another spot in a song.
Editing is about cutting, placing, fading, cross−fading, shifting, duplicating and adjusting the volume
(also referred to as level) of audio material. Mixing is a form of editing too of course.
Here is an example of what is done in sound editing during the production of a television show or film. In the next part we will run you through a few of those techniques in Audacity.
The Path of Sound in Film and TV Postproduction
Film and TV crews have at least two people present that take care of recording sound during principal photography of a show. Principal photography is usually shooting the scenes with actual live actors or real backgrounds by the way.
Sound in Principal Photography
The first person is the boom pole operator. The boom pole is an extendible stick with a microphone attached to it. This is used to capture dialogue either during filming or not. When not filming, it might be capturing off−scene dialogue or retakes of lines that the actors flunked during actual film takes. The more expensive the show is and the more time there is to do the work, the more people will resort to looping those takes, which is recording those lines in a sound studio environment instead of a film studio or location.
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The second person is the sound mixer, who usually sits in a place farther off from the shooting and records the sound captures by the boom pole operator, either via cable or wireless devices to tape, optical disks or hard drive.
This is the raw sound material of a show. It is called production sound and the only desirable parts it usually contains are dialogue and body sounds. In post production, depending on the complexity, budget size and time, almost everything you hear except for the dialogue and some body sounds, are added later during ...
Post Production
This is where most of the stuff we'll be describing for Audacity will happen. You've got the recording. Now what ?
After the visual part of the show is cut, the first of which usually isn't the final one, it is handed to the sound editor. In TV shows, you'll usually have one or two people for this, for major film productions a whole bunch more, for which tasks will be subdivided on a finer level.
Raw sound − Cleanup time
No shows do without film edits and many have plenty of them.
Scenes may be shot with with one or more cameras and mics. Actors might have flunked their lines and picking up shooting prior to the mistake might be chosen or the entire sequence reshot. The film editor may have chosen parts from different takes for the cut of the scene. The action might be moving along at the wrong pace and the film editor shortened or stretched parts of a scene.
The sound editor makes sure transitions between cuts are smooth. He or she removes undesired sounds, such as breathers of the same person that overlap from one film edit to the next.
Material is cut away that contains unwanted sounds, such as creaking chair legs and sharp impacts of objects on tables and floors. Some of these may require looping of dialogue in the studio, because the noise may have been intolerable. Also, material may sometimes be de−noised. The most sophisticated methods remove the whirring of the camera motors from takes. It is used as sparingly
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Audacity Manual Title Page as possible though.
It's always desirable to get the best possible sound from the start, which is the recording stage.
Adding stuff − the really big deal
After this cleanup is complete, sounds are added.
The first is ambiance. Just close your eyes and listen the sound around you. That's ambiance.
Sophistication of ambiances rises with budgets. From premixed to over a dozen tracks, you'll find it all in TV shows and feature films. In any indoor scene with a lot of people in the background, nobody except for the actors being filmed will actually talk. That flurry of conversation is added later on.
Next comes foley. These are clothes rustling(body sounds), foot steps and objects being handled.
People that have the ultimate edition of Terminator 2 will know that all of Arnold Schwarzenegger's footsteps and rustle of his leather clothing were created by a five foot woman. These people are usually called foley walkers or foley artists.
The foley editor then cleans those sound, chooses the most fitting takes and makes sure they all sync to the picture properly. The foley mixer then does his/her thing.
Next come effects. Foley are effects too, but they are a special category and can best be described as live created studio effects. Effects are usually more heavily edited and recorded from all kinds of places. A lot of effects are created by layering sounds on top of each other, changing their pitch and loudness, editing bits out and adding others.
Many effects you'll hear are phone and door bells ringing, mobile phone beeps, doors of houses and cars opening and closing, weapon shots, slaps, car skids, machines of any kind, space ships flying around, explosions, to name a few.
For example, a friend of mine and I created the sound of a small wooden rowing boat hitting a larger wooden sailing ship and scraping along its side by pitching down a knock on a large wooden door for the impact of the rowing boat and ship, and pitching down the sound of a skateboard rolling and
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Audacity Manual Title Page scraping along a halfpipe.
The techniques required to properly handle sounds like these are used in all kinds of productions.
Audio books, music production, sound effects creation ... you name it.
For more on this subject, read the Audio Post FAQ at www.filmsound.org
.
So let's jump in to the fray and look at how you can handle your sounds in Audacity.
proceed to
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Introduction Cut,Copy&Paste Silence, Duplicate and Split Splitting and Submixes
II.Editing for Beginners
Part 2 − Cut, Copy and Paste − Part 2
From here on you may encounter funny letter combinations in boxes like this.
These are keyboard shortcuts to the functions presented to you in the text. These can be either single keys (e.g. SPACE) or combinations that need to be held down at the same time(e.g.CTRL+C). You
can usually create your own. Check out the this page for more details.
The most basic editing step is cut and paste. It's what people did with tape and it's easy with data in
computers, so take a look at these basic operations, referred to as Cut, Copy and Paste. The next
page will handle Silence, Duplicate and Split. You may also want to check out the reference
section, so you'll know where to find all the tools and how to resize tracks for example.
It is assumed that you have a project open and that at least one track of audio material is present.
Let's take a look at this example of an Audacity window:
The View
The Audacity Window
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As you can see by the graphics above, the
is selected. It is used to move the entire audio clip around inside its track.
The cursor (little blinking line across a track and the timeline) will remain at its position, so effectively you'll be sliding your audio material underneath the cursor.
Let's say we want to cut out that bit in the middle then. First we've got to select it.
Making a selection
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To select the part you wish to cut, copy or paste to, use the
. If it's not activated, do so now by clicking on it in the toolbar.
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.
Cutting the selection
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Cut the selection by selecting "
" from the
or press CTRL+X.
Before the cut 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.
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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.
proceed to
Part 3 − Silence, Duplicate and Split.
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Introduction Cut,Copy&Paste Silence, Duplicate and Split Splitting and Submixes
II.Editing for Beginners
Part 3 − Silence, Duplicate and Split − Part 3
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
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 :
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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
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go to
Part 4 − Splitting and Submixes
.
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Introduction Cut,Copy&Paste Silence, Duplicate and Split Splitting and Submixes
II.Editing for Beginners
Part 4 − Splitting and Submixes − Part 4
Moving bits of an Audio track
In all projects you'll be pushing your audio around at some point. Otherwise, what are you doing here ?
There are techniques, easily achievable with Audacity, to cover almost any kind shifting you'd want to do. In our example, we have a small sentence of speech, where the speaker made a pause after the first word. We'd like to eliminate that pause.
The part after the pause is selected
Select
Then the
split function is used to pop the selected audio to a new track
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Split
is selected and the audio on the lower track is moved left.
Move Audio and select for fading
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Now, it's a good idea to listen to the two tracks individually for breathing sounds for example.
Use the solo button of the tracks for this. Then listen them both in the mix. Again, you can use the solo buttons for this.
Two thirds, and not the whole overlapping audio, are chosen to keep the level of audio constant. If the whole overlapping parts were faded, you would get a level drop of 3dB in the middle of those fades.
If you have a lot of other tracks playing at the same time, press the solo buttons on both tracks.
There should be no over lapping or cut−off breathing sounds.
When you're satisfied, fade out the last two thirds of the overlapping upper part of the track, and fade in the first two thirds of the lower overlapping audio.
You can check this out by taking a piece of music, duplicating it, and then fading the tracks, one fading out, the second fading in. In the middle of those fades, the level of the mix will drop audibly. Do a fade over last two thirds for the fade out and first two thirds for the fade in, and you probably won't notice any change in level.
Two thirds is a guideline, but not the law, so you may have to experiment a little.
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
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:
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Bits and Pieces spread all over the screen
First four tracks selected for quick mixing
We can use the
Quick Mix function in the Project menu to bring down the number of tracks.
However, you don't need to mix everything in to one new track.
Select the tracks you want to mix together by SHIFT+click 'ing on the track panels. In the graphics above, the first four tracks are selected.
Then select
. In this example I have quick mixed everything down to two tracks :
Bits and Pieces, quick mixed down to two tracks
And thus, two submixes were created. Remember though, that we did this for convenience of not having to organize a large number or tracks.
If you still want to shift bits around later on, you should make sure that the parts being mixed to a track do not overlap, so you can split it away and edit it again later.
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Quickies Editing Vocal Tracks Cutting up long Tracks
Tutorial − III.Common Editing Tasks
Part 1 − Quickies − Part 1
This page will give you an idea of some of the possible things you can do with Audacity and walk you through the process.
1. Splitting an MP3 into two separate files
2. Mixing background music with a voiceover
3. Recording harmonies with yourself
4. Recording two sound sources on separate tracks
Splitting an MP3 into two separate files
(Before you try to export MP3 files, read the
section on Exporting MP3 Files
for some important information on steps you need to do first.)
•
Open the MP3 file.
•
Select the part of it that you want to be the first file. Listen to it by clicking the Play
• button.
While this part is selected, choose Export
•
Selection as MP3... from the File menu.
Now select the part you want to be the other song and Export again.
Mixing background music with a voiceover
Recording harmonies with yourself
•
Open the Preferences, click on the Audio
I/O tab, and check the box marked "Play
• other tracks while recording new one".
Click the Record button. Record yourself
• singing. Click Stop.
Click the Record button again. The first track you recorded will play, but
Audacity will also record a new track at the same time, allowing you to sing
• harmony with yourself.
When you play the two tracks you recorded together, they probably won't be synchronized. This is normal and is not the fault of Audacity. To fix it, you will
need to grab the Time Shift tool and slide
one of the tracks around until it sounds
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Audacity makes it very easy to mix two different sounds together.
right.
•
Open one sound (for example, the
• background music).
Select Import Audio... from the Project menu and open the other sound (for
• example, the voiceover).
Listen to your sound using the Play button. Audacity automatically mixes
• them together.
Choose the Time Shift tool and adjust the
position of one track or the other until they're synchronized the way you want them. You can even move tracks around
• while they're playing.
If you hear clipping which wasn't present in either of the original files, it means that the combined volume of the two tracks is too loud. Use the gain controls on the tracks to reduce the volumes until you
• don't hear clipping anymore.
Export as a WAV or MP3 file.
Recording two sound sources on separate tracks
•
Open the Preferences, click on the Audio
I/O tab, and make sure "Record in Stereo"
• is checked.
Connect one sound source to the left channel of your soundcard and the other on the right. If you don't have an external mixer with a pan control, use a
• stereo/mono splitter cable.
Record your stereo track.
•
On the button with the track name is a drop−down menu. Select "Split Stereo
•
Track" from this menu.
Use the drop down menu again to change
• each track to mono.
To position sounds in the stereo image use
• the pan control on each track.
To export your recording in stereo you need to include at least one Stereo track.
If necessary add a blank one using Project
•
> New Stereo Track.
Repeat as necessary for further tracks (see
Recording harmonies with yourself
above). If mastering from tape, a click recorded across all tracks will help you synchronize them in Audacity.
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Quickies Editing Vocal Tracks Cutting up long Tracks
Tutorial − III.Common Editing Tasks
Part 2 − Editing Vocal Tracks − Part 2
The Situation
You have:
Vocals, Speech or Wallas (fx made with voices)
You want to:
•
remove inappropriate breathers, coughing, bad takes, parts you didn't like
• and bad noises
use only the good parts of takes
•
construct sequences from parts of different takes
When do I use what ?
You can combine three ways of handling this:
stuff you don't want.
2. Substitute it with,
♦ a piece of ambience to prevent a
♦ sudden hole in the sound texture more fitting breather, that works better, if you're cutting a breather away.
3.
Use the envelope tool to create volume
automation to pull down those parts, so they won't sound as loud in the end.
The first option is a tool, but is rarely used by itself.
In audio books, radio interviews and sometimes in dialog for a film, the vocal tracks will stand
alone in many parts of your project.
Continuous sound is the key in those cases and having the ambience, even if it's just a bit of quiet dark noise, drop away in many parts by
them isn't going to sound as good as keeping a steady sound texture.
Therefore the second option is general practice.
Many times, the third option is used as
well( envelope tool ). The holes you create with it
are easier to control and change at later times, but still need to be filled up with replacement
Therefore filling those holes with material on another track and fading the edges to make it all sound continuous is the preferred way to do it.
There are situations, such as vocals in a song, that you'd like to sound as clean as possible.
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The best way is to have a very quiet recording room or location.
When using the
, replacement material is usually overlayed by placing the filler material on another track right at the area in the timeline as the hole is. For this reason only
unwanted audio if it's too obtrusive.
The second best way is to use volume automation to get rid of any unwanted stuff. It allows you to change or take back what you did after you have made those changes to the volume curve with the
Bad takes are of course not usable, so usually you'll have to
(cut without copying to the clipboard) work like cutting tape
away and sticking the remaining pieces together.
If you're doing things that require critical timing,
you need to keep this in mind. Use the Silence
function instead.
The Three Options − a quick How To
With volume automation you can mute sections of the audio without actually making any edits to the audio data.
Silencing
•
Select an unwanted piece of audio.
•
Listen to it a couple of times, adjust your selection if necessary, and listen again.
•
or hit CTRL+L on your keyboard.
•
Fade the edges of the audio beyond your selection to smooth it out.
•
Listen to it. If it doesn't sound good, hit
Undo or press CTRL+Z on your keyboard, and try
• again fading those edges.
Repeat this procedure for every part you don't want in your audio.
Substitution
♦
Silence all unwanted bits as described in the section above. Substitution expands and
improves that option. Be sure to only
silence the bits you don't want and don't forget to fade
the edges around the silenced material. Then come back here.
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♦
Now that you've silenced all unwanted, create a new audio track.
♦
Now find a piece of audio that'll work as a substitute for those deleted parts. This is usually a piece of ambience somewhere else in the audio track. The speaker might have made a longer
♦ pause, so look in those areas first. Select that bit and
Using the
, move the duplicated ambience directly beneath the first silenced
♦ part in your vocal track.
Now select the entire track by clicking on track panel just beneath the Solo buttons, and
♦
duplicate it. Mute that new track. This will be our filler for the next gap in the original track.
Turn your attention back to the first bit of ambience, that is now right underneath the bit that we silenced in our vocal track.
Using the Envelope Tool
•
•
Left−Click in to an area to create a new automation point or left−click on an existing
• automation point and drag to change the location of the point.
The automation you have written remains bolted to the audio, so it will move along with the
•
audio when you use the timeshift tool .
An example:
Using the envelope tool − an example
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Quickies Editing Vocal Tracks Cutting up long Tracks
Tutorial − III.Common Editing Tasks
Part 3 − Cutting up long Tracks − Part 3
Long Recordings
You have:
a large audio file
(a mix, a live recording, loads of voice overs recorded at once,...)
Splitting tracks for CD burning
You want to split it up in to parts that you wish to be separate audio tracks on a CD.
You can cut it up, so all the parts can be selected easily for export.
Important:
The selection format for the track that contains the audio clip to be split has to be :
cdda min:sec:frames 75fps (from ruler)
Also, "Set Snap−To Mode" to "On (for ruler based formats)"
The result is that all the tracks you split away will lie within the grid that not only CD players can access, but that CD burning programs can actually burn without pauses.
That grid consists of 1/75th of a second, and beginnings and ends of any tracks on an audio CD cannot lie outside that grid.
Chop By The Numbers:
The goal is to split the long audio track in to several smaller tracks, so that for each track we want to have on the audio CD, there is one track in Audacity, which is easy to export.
1. Check and make sure that the right ruler format and Snap−To On is selected(see above) for
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Audacity Manual Title Page track you're working on.
2. Place the cursor where you'd like the current track to end and the new one to start.
3. Go to the Edit menu and pick Select Cursor To End.
4. Go to the Edit menu and pick Split.
5. Repeat steps 1 to 4 as necessary.
You can also select from Start to Cursor instead. The track with the split away material will retain the ruler and Snap−TO setting of its source track.
Get Them Ready for Deep Fry:
Once all the tracks are created you need to Export each Audacity track that you wish to be on your
CD. Check the
preferences under "File Formats". The "Uncompressed Export Format" needs to be
set to "WAV (Microsoft 16 bit PCM) (PC or Linux users) or "AIFF (Apple/SGI 16 bit PCM)"
(Mac users).
1. Click on an empty part of the track panel(left of the wave display with the mute and solo buttons) of the track you wish to export. The contents of that track will be selected.
2. Go to the File menu and pick "Export Selection as WAV" (or AIFF if you're on a Mac).
Pick your filename carefully. Number them accordingly, so it'll be easy to select them for burning the audio CD later on.
3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 for each track you wish to be on your audio CD
Roast, Toast or Burn Them
Open your CD burning application to burn your audio CD with the exported audio files. Make sure that no pauses are between those tracks. The only exception is the standard pause before the first track. That's required by the Red Book standard, so don't be alarmed. Burn and enjoy.
Conclusion
That was easy, wasn't it. Think you know how this could work a lot easier ? Do you need additional help or have suggestions on how to improve Audacity ? Drop us a line at audacity−[email protected]
.
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IV.Effect for Beginners
Part 1 − A Virtual Room with Reverbs − Part 1
An example by the numbers
As an example I'd like to show you how to create a reverb for small club with a band.
Let's see what we have to do with parameters in the reverb fx in sample editors. First we determine some basics about the room we want to simulate.
Our room(the club) is about eight meters on all sides(for simplicity) and three meters high. The band will be playing no more than four meters away from us. The room volume will be about 200 cubic meters.
This means that the DIRECT SOUND will get to you within about 11 ms (milliseconds). This is the amount of time we'll need to take off the other values.
The first EARLY REFLECTIONS (off the left and right walls) travel around nine meters before reaching you, so they'll get to your ears about 15 ms later! (9 meters at 343 meters/sec −> 26 ms minus the 11 ms the DIRECT SOUND takes to travel to your ears).
I'm not taking the floor into account because of the obstacles, such as your own legs and a table, that prevent reflections of sound from the band from reaching you. It is also probable that your sitting close to a wall and EARLY REFLECTION time may drop considerably. Experiment and listen very carefully.
The reason I'm deducting 11 ms from the 26 ms is that in a sample editor we already have the
DIRECT SOUND. In Cool Edit an EARLY REFLECTIONS parameter doesn't exist. In Soundforge however there are a few ER times to choose from. We choose whatever is closest to 15 ms. Freeverb unfortunately does not have an Early Reflections feature.
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Please note that the timing of the EARLY REFLECTIONS are defined by the rooms characteristics such as shape and size. The sound colour of the EARLY REFLECTIONS is defined by the surfaces in the room.These are parameters that are available to professional reverbs only(hard− or software), so don't worry about not finding that stuff in great detail in either Soundforge's, CoolEditPro's or plugins of other editors.
The PRE−DELAY and REVERB TIME depend on more than just room size. Wall and floor material, as well as anything else that reflects, disperses and dampens sound will influence the reverb in quite a few ways.
Our club has lots of wood on it's walls and floor and people are sitting at tables and the air's probably filled with a little smoke(except in California :).
The REVERB TIME, a parameter found in almost all plugins, should be set to no more than one second. In small, crowded rooms where little REVERB occurs it is quite important to set the
EARLY REFLECTIONS right. Experiment with the reverb time keep it lower than 1.2 seconds and above 0.7 seconds. Freeverb puts all this information in to the SIZE parameter.
The PRE−DELAY can be set to 30 ms or more. Larger rooms will develop REVERB later since the reflecting sound will travel a while before the reflections become hard to identify but it also depends on the reflecting materials. Freeverb once again doesn't know any Predelays, but since you're reading this to learn how things work, it's still worth spelling out.
Both Cool Edit and Soundforge have parameters referring to the DENSITY of the REVERB part of the sound. Materials such as polished marble will reflect the sound very well and disperse the sound very little. Wood disperses the sound a lot and a carpet practically swallows a large chunk of it. For our Club we need to set the density high since our material disperses the sound a lot(humans,wood and obstacles). No parameter like that in Freeverb and yet it sounds great. It's easy to use as well, so
I don't really mind when using it.
Higher frequencies are swallowed a lot faster than low frequencies. Many reverb algorithms refer to this in some form or another. Cool Edit has the 'High Frequency Absorption Time' as a parameter for this. Sound Forge gives you a choice, whether to do this at all for both low and high frequencies and even lets you set them but doesn't provide any time parameters. Professional Reverb hardware such
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Audacity Manual Title Page as Lexicon PCM 70,80&90 let you you control frequency and time of this, for low and high frequencies. Freeverb has the DAMPEN parameter for this.
This can effectively add to room's liveliness. A room full of people will absorb high frequencies a lot faster than an empty room, in which only the materials would make the difference, so in Cool Edit we'll set the 'High Frequency Absorbtion Time' very low, since we're in a crowded club. For
Soundforge activate the 'Attenuate high frequencies above' box and set the frequency parameter to around 2000−2500 Hz. Experiment a bit. The higher this frequency and the longer the Absorbtion
Time parameter in Cool Edit, the emptier and and colder your room will seem. In small rooms this can cause the room to sound very metallic. Sewer pipes and oil pipelines e.g.
The Reverb EQs are the final processing stage and can change the sound dramatically. These Hishelf and Lowshelf EQs are found in almost ANY Reverb plugin and hardware unit. Freeverb has both in form of Hipass and Lowpass filters. These are not EQs. The parameters change the target frequencies of the filters. Again, listen.
The last thing you have to do is set the balance between the WET signal and your original DRY signal. Here you can do as you please but remember that only very smoothed hard surfaces in big cavernous space create very loud reverbs. A church might do that if there aren't a big number of people and wooden benches in there, but a club doesn't :). Remember that in Audacity it is smarter to
DUPLICATE the part you wish to add reverb to, and run the effect over that duplicate. The volume of that reverbed material is easier to control, so set the WET parameter in Freeverb to 0dB(−>100%) and the DRY parameter to −endless(−>0% left most slider position).
So when you create your next 'soon−to−be−the−hit' song or want to put things in perspective, be sure to check the possibilities of adding dimension and scope to your material through clever use of reverbs. Put your snare to the front, the piano a little to the back, and the sax just a little in front of the drums. Experiment. With these basics you'll be able to get better results in less time.
Btw, Snare always gets reverb. How much and what kind up to you, but it's generally good thing. It's also important to decide whether you're trying to simulate a real live band or doing a multitrack sound, which boasts all kinds of nice ideas, like doubling(another take of the same thing on top of the first take), extreme panning and in general NOT reality :).
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Dry versus Wet
Have you heard of those silent rooms, where they test speakers and microphones ? They're great if you don't happen to be inside of one. After a few minutes you hear the blood in your ears roar like an ocean. You hear only your inner voice when you speak. The room swallows almost everything else.
Most people can't stand being in a room like this for more than 10−15 minutes. I am told that this is very different to wearing ear plugs. Those only attenuate sound from the outside. A silent room kills it completely.
This room is horrible to listen to, because it basically features no room reverberation, i.e. it doesn't reflect anything at all. It doesn't reveal any information about its size or surface composition.
You may be surprised to know that many vocals are actually recorded in similar environments.
Vocal booths are little rooms, in which the walls reflect sound as little as possible. During mixing, digital reverbs are used to create a virtual space.
Digital Reverbs
Audacity for Windows and MacOS8&X includes the VST plugin Freeverb, which is one fine reverb, and ideally suited to take your first steps with digital reverbs. It features simple controls that require little explanation.
For details about Freeverb, check out the
page. For information on how digital reverbs work and what reverb is, check out
of this manual.
Keeping effects on seperate tracks
You shouldn't use reverbs on original audio tracks. First duplicate
the audio and use the reverb on that duplicate. The reverb should be set to output 100% WET (i.e. 100% effect signal and 0% of the original signal). That way, you can control how much reverb should make it in to the final mix, right up until the last minute.
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V.Selecting and aligning
Part 1 − Selecting − Part 1
Basic rules
Selecting can be done with the keyboard, the mouse or by combining the keyboard and mouse.
You need to have the
Selection Tool activated for making a selection.
The exception is selecting the entire track by clicking on the track panel. The align
functions all still work the same way no matter which tool is activated. However, making selections and placing the cursor still requires the
.
The selection modifier key is SHIFT.
In a word processor or text editor, the SHIFT key is the modifier to turn any character that you enter via the keyboard in to an UPPERCASE character. In Audacity and most audio editing applications, holding down the SHIFT key means that any cursor movement or placement will result in a selection.
What follows are ways of making selections.
How do I ...
select audio on one track ?
select all the audio of a track ?
Place the cursor on the waveform of a track, hold down the mouse button, drag the mouse and release the mouse button.
You can select audio with the keyboard as well,
Click on the track panel. The resulting selection will be confined to the contents of that track.
select all the audio of two or more tracks ?
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Audacity Manual Title Page but may need to place the cursor with the mouse first. You need to hold down the SHIFT key and use the left/right cursor keys to expand the selection. Combine the former with the CTRL key (STRG on the German keyboard) to shrink the selection.
expand/shrink my selection ?
It cannot be done precisely right now, if one track isn't within the range of the other.It actually doesn't have to be, because of the group functions in the Align menu, but more of that later.
If the start and end of one track is within the start and end of the other, simply select the longer track, then SHIFT + click the second track panel.
Hold the SHIFT key, then click and hold the mouse button.
If you clicked to the left of the center of the current selection, you will now be able to move the left selection boundary with your mouse. The same goes for the right hand side of the selection center. Release the mouse button when you are satisfied.
You can use the cursor keys as well. It works the same way as described in the previous item.
If the start and end of one track is not within the start and end of the other, select the one track, then expand the selection by SHIFT + clicking in to the second track until the selection encompasses all the desired material.
select all the audio of the project ?
Use the Select All function in the Edit menu, or hit CTRL+A.
select from the cursor to the start of the track ?
menu.
select from the cursor to the end of the track ?
menu.
select from the cursor to the start of the project ?
Hold the SHIFT key and click on the Skip to
button.
select from the cursor to the end of the project ?
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Hold the SHIFT key and click on the Skip to End
button.
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Reference
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Menus
File Edit View Project Generate Effects Analyze
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FileEditViewProjectGenerateEffectAnalyze
File Menu
New...
Creates a new empty project window.
Export Selection As WAV...
This is the same as
Export , but it only exports the
part of the project that is selected. This is very useful if you want to save a small clip from part of a track as a separate file.
Open...
Selecting Open presents you with a dialog where you can choose a file to open. If the current
In addition, Audacity can also attempt to open an audio file in a different format, as long as it is
uncompressed − to do this, use the Import Raw
command.
Export As MP3...
project window is empty, the new file will take over the current window, otherwise a new project window will be opened.
Exports the current Audacity project as an MP3 file. Audacity does not encode MP3 files directly, but instead requires that you download a separate
MP3 encoder. See Exporting MP3 Files
for The file formats recognized by Audacity are
,
MIDI , and the Audacity Project file details.
format (
To export only a single track or part of track, use
Export Selection As MP3...
Close
This is the same as
, but it only exports the part of the project that is selected.
This is very useful if you want to save a small clip from part of a track as a separate file. See
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Closes the current project window.
.
Save Project Export As OGG...
Saves the current Audacity project (
Audacity projects are not intended to be read by other programs, but they are extremely fast to load and save within Audacity. When you are
Exports the current Audacity project as an Ogg
Vorbis file.
finished working on a project and you want to be able to use it in another program, select one of the
commands instead.
To export only a single track or part of track, use
Export Selection As OGG...
Note that most of the audio data for an Audacity
project is not stored in the AUP
file, but in a directory (folder) with the same name as the project. For example, if you save a project as chanson.aup
, there will be a directory called chanson_data
created to store the actual
This is the same as
exports the part of the project that is selected.
This is very useful if you want to save a small clip from part of a track as a separate file. audio tracks of the project. For more information on the project file format, see
.
Export Labels...
Save Project As...
If you have any Label Tracks , this command will
export them as a text file. This feature is commonly used in Speech Recognition research to annotate a speech utterance and export the annotation to be later processed by another program.
Saves the current Audacity project (
allowing you to give it a different name or move it to a new location if you have already saved it in one location.
To import these labels into a different project
later, use the Import Labels command.
Audacity projects are not intended to be read by other programs, but they are extremely fast to load and save within Audacity. When you are
Export Multiple...
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Audacity Manual Title Page finished working on a project and you want to be This allows you to do multiple exports from able to use it in another program, select one of the
commands instead.
audacity with one command based either on multiple tracks in the project or labels in a single
For more information on the project file format, see
.
audio track. It's great for splitting up long recordings into CD tracks
Preferences
Export As WAV...
Exports the current Audacity project as a standard
Opens a dialog window that lets you configure
Audacity. For more information on the different audio file format such as
preferences, see the section on
.
You can change the format of exported files in the
Exit/Quit
If there are multiple tracks in your project, they will be automatically mixed in the exported data.
For more information about mixing, see
.
To export only a single track or part of a track, use
.
Closes all project windows and exits Audacity. It will ask you if you want to save changes to your project. It is not necessary for you to save changes if you just exported your file as WAV or
MP3 and you are finished working with it. On the other hand, if you are working on a mix and plan to continue where you left off, saving an
Audacity Project will let you restore everything as it is later.
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Edit Menu
Undo Copy
This will undo the last editing operation you performed to your project. Audacity currently supports full unlimited undo − meaning you can undo every editing operation back to when you opened the window.
Copies the selected audio data to the clipboard without removing it from the project.
Paste
Redo
This will redo any editing operations that were just undone. After you perform a new editing operation, you can no longer redo the operations that were undone.
Inserts whatever is on the clipboard at the position of the selection cursor in the project, replacing whatever audio data is currently selected, if any.
Trim
Deletes everything but the selection.
Cut
Removes the selected audio data and places it on the clipboard. Only one "thing" can be on the clipboard at a time, but it may contain multiple tracks.
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Delete Split
Removes the audio data that is currently selected without copying it to the clipboard.
Moves the selected region into its own track or tracks, replacing the affected portion of the original track with silence. See the figure below:
Silence
Erases the audio data currently selected, replacing it with silence instead of removing it completely.
Duplicate
Makes a copy of all or part of a track or set of tracks into new tracks. See the figure below:
Select... > All
Selects all of the audio in all of the tracks.
Selection Save
Saves the current selection and position. This function only saves the selection boundaries, but not the actual audio data.
Select... > Start to Cursor
Selects all the audio from the start of the timeline to the current cursor.
Selection Restore
Restores the selection to the project. You need to
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Select... > Cursor to End have an exist selection for this to work.
Selects all the audio from the cursor to the end of project, which is as far as audio exists in the project.
Move Cursor...
Find Zero Crossings
These commands provide quick and accurate ways to manoeuvre the cursor around the project to the start and end of tracks and selections.
Moves the cursor or the edges of the selection to the nearest point where the audio waveform passes though zero. Use this to help achieve click−free cuts in audio, as the two ends of the cut will exactly line up.
Snap−To...
Turns snapping of the cursor to a grid of time values on or off. When off, your cursor can be positioned on any sample in the audio file. When on, it is restricted to certain points in time, determined by the time format in use. This is useful if your project must follow an external timecode exactly.
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FileEditViewProjectGenerateEffectAnalyze
View Menu
Zoom In History
Zooms in on the horizontal axis of the audio, displaying more detail about less time. You can also use the zoom tool to zoom in on a particular part of the window.
Zoom Normal
Brings up the history window. It shows all the actions you have performed during the current session, including importing. The right−hand column shows the amount of HD space your operations used. You can jump back and forth between editing steps quite easily by simply clicking on the entries in the window.
Zooms to the default view, which displays about one inch per second.
The history window can be kept open at all times.
It doesn't interfere with any other operations.
Zoom Out
Zooms out, displaying less detail about more time.
Plot Spectrum
To use this feature, first select a region of audio from a single track, then select "Plot Spectrum".
Fit in Window
Zooms out until the entire project just fits in the window.
It opens up a window which displays the Power
Spectrum of the audio over that region, calculated using the Fast Fourier Transform. The graph represents how much energy is in each frequency.
This window can also display other common functions that are calculated using the Fast
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Fit Vertically Fourier Transform, including three versions of the Autocorrelation function.
Adjusts the height of all the tracks until they fit in the project window.
The Enhanced Autocorrelation function is very good at identifying the pitch of a note.
Zoom to Selection
Zooms in until the selected audio fills the width of the screen to show the selection in more detail.
Set Selection Format
Toggles between displaying the tool docked at the top of each project window, or in a separate floating window. You can also float any toolbar by grabbing the handle on the left side and dragging it to the location you want.
Sets the format in which selections are measured in at the bottom of the application window.
Combined with setting Set Snap−To Mode to
ON, this is ideal to cut stuff up in to exact measures.
Float or Dock Control Toolbar
Once they are floating these options change to docking the toolbars back into the main window.
Float or Dock Menu Toolbar
Set Snap−To Mode Float or Dock Mixer Toolbar
Float or Dock Meter Toolbar
Do the same thing for the other toolbars
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Project Menu
Import Audio...
Quick Mix
This command is used to import audio from a standard audio format into your project. Use this command if you already have a couple of tracks, and you want to add another track to the same project, maybe to mix them together.
This command mixes all of the selected tracks down to one or two tracks. The channel of a track being mixed affects whether it will be mixed into the left channel of the resulting track(s), the right channel, or both (mono).
Use this command to import anything except
MIDI files. You cannot yet use this option to import Audacity Projects.
Import Labels...
For example, if you have four tracks:
•
Track 1: left channel
•
Track 2: left channel
•
Track 3: right channel
•
Track 4: mono channel
This command takes a text file which contains time codes and labels, and turns them into a
and you select them all and perform a Quick Mix, you will end up with two tracks: the first will contain a mix of tracks 1, 2, and 4 (the new left channel) and the other will contain a mix of tracks 3 and 4 (the new right channel).
Import MIDI...
This menu command imports MIDI files and puts them into a
. Audacity can display
MIDI files, but cannot play, edit, or save them yet.
Your tracks are implicitly mixed whenever you
button and whenever you select
.
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Import Raw Data...
This menu command allows you to open a file in virtually any format, as long as it is not compressed. When you select the file, Audacity will look through it and try to guess its format. It will guess correctly about 90% of the time, so you can try just pressing "OK" and listening to it.
If it is not correct, however, you can use the dialog presented to try all of the different possibilities.
Note that if you try to mix two very loud tracks together, you may get clipping (it will sound like pops, clicks, and noise). To avoid this, you should use the track gain controls to reduce the amplitude of all of your tracks.
New Audio Track
At the beginning of your imported track(s), you may notice a little bit of noise. This is probably the file's header, which Audacity was not able to parse. Just zoom in and select the noise with the
Selection Tool , and then choose
.
This creates a new empty audio track. This command is rarely needed, since importing, recording, and mixing automatically create new tracks as needed. But you can use this to cut or copy data from an existing track and paste it into a blank track.
New Stereo Track
Edit ID3 Tags...
Opens a dialog allowing you to edit the ID3 tags associated with a project, for MP3 exporting.
Creates a stereo version of the new audio track above. You may need this if you start with a load of mono tracks and want to export a stereo mix.
ID3 Tags are used to store the Title, Artist,
Author, and other information in MP3 files.
When you import an MP3 file, Audacity remembers this information and stores it with your project. When you export an MP3 file,
Audacity will prompt you for the ID3 tags, showing you any tags it collected from an original MP3 file, or that you typed by selecting
"Edit ID3 Tags" from the Project menu.
New Label Track
This creates a new Label track, which can be very useful for textual annotation. See the discussion on Label tracks for more information on how to use label tracks.
New Time Track
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Audacity allows you to store ID3 tags in either the ID3v1 or the ID3v2 format. In general, you should use the ID3v2 format, because ID3v2 tags go at the beginning of an MP3 file, whereas
ID3v1 tags go at the end. Having the title and author first means that someone downloading an
MP3 you created will know that information before they've finished downloading the song.
Creates a special track that can be used to speed up and slow down playback over the course of the project. This affects all tracks in the project.
Remove Track(s)
This command removes the selected track or tracks from the project. Even if only part of a track is selected, the entire track is removed. You can also delete a track by clicking the X in its upper−left corner. To cut out only part of the
.
Align functions
All the align functions work on whole tracks or groups of tracks, NOT on selections, even if they
find some creative uses and solutions to common problems there.
These functions operate on each track individually. If more than one track is selected, these functions do not preserve their position to one another.
Align with Zero Align End with Cursor
Aligns the start of any selected tracks to the start of the project.
Aligns the end of any selected tracks to the cursor position.
Align with Cursor
Aligns the start of any selected tracks to the cursor position.
Align End with Selection Start
Aligns the end of any selected tracks to the start of the current selection
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Align with Selection Start Align End with Selection End
Aligns the start of any selected tracks to the start of the current selection
Aligns the end of any selected tracks to the end of the current selection
Align with Selection End Align Tracks Together
Aligns the start of any selected tracks to the end of the current selection
If you select multiple tracks, this command adjusts their time offset so that they start at the same time. It adjusts their starting time to the average of all of the tracks' original starting times. To adjust the time offset of one track, use the
tool.
Align and Move Cursor
These commands work just like the align commands with the move cursor command immediately
following it.
Add Label at Selection
This menu item lets you create a new label at the current selection. You can title the label by typing
Add Label at Selection with the keyboard and then hitting "Enter" when you're done. The label saves your current selection − so when you click on the label later it will return the selection to the state it was in when you created the label. See the discussion on
Label tracks for more information on how to use label tracks.
Like
but the label is added at the current position during playback.
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Generate Menu
Silence Tone
Inserts silence. The length is determined by the length of your selection and the position by the
left boundary of your selection.
Inserts a wave of chosen type, frequency and amplitude. The length is determined by the length of your selection and the position by the left
boundary of your selection.
If no selection is made, the default length inserted at the cursor position is 30 seconds.
If no selection is made, the default length inserted at the cursor position is 30 seconds.
For example, to insert a two seconds of silence at a certain point, place the cursor at your chosen spot, hold the SHIFT key down, click and drag your mouse to the right to mark roughly two seconds, release the mouse button and activate the Silence function in the Generate menu.
Silence, the length of your selection, will be inserted at the left boundary of your selection.
Parameters:
Waveform Sine, Square, Sawtooth
Frequency(Hz) 1−20000 (value below 1.0 and
Amplitude above 20000 will be corrected to
1.0 and 20000!)
0−1 − This is the volume of the generated wave.
White Noise Pluck
Inserts white noise. The length is determined by the length of your selection and the position by the left boundary of your selection.
Inserts a synthesized pluck tone. The length is determined by the length of your selection and the position by the left boundary of your
selection.
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If no selection is made, the default length inserted at the cursor position is 30 seconds.
If no selection is made, the default length inserted at the cursor position is one second.
Pitch 0−127
The number corresponds to the value of a midi note, which is assigned to a pitch. The higher the number, the higher the note.
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Effects Menu
Audacity includes many built−in effects and also lets you use a wide range of plug−in effects. You can download many free plugins for Audacity at our Website . Loads of information is also available at http://www.kvr−vst.com
.
To apply an effect, simply select part or all of the tracks you want to modify, and select the effect from the menu. Titles which end in an ellipsis (...) will bring up a dialog asking you for more parameters.
There are four classes of effects and they are all
applied the same way. These are
VST Effect Plugins (Windows/Mac only),
Internal Effects
Amplify...
Invert
This effect increases or decreases the volume of a track or set of tracks. When you open the dialog,
Audacity automatically calculates the maximum amount you could amplify the selected audio without causing clipping (from being too loud).
Bass Boost...
This is a safe, smooth filter which can amplify
This effect flips the audio samples upside−down.
This normally does not affect the sound of the audio at all. It is occasionally useful, for example when the left and right channels of a song both contain equal amounts of vocals, but unequal amounts of background instruments. By inverting one of the channels and not the other, the vocals will cancel each other out, leaving just the instrumentals. Obviously this only works if the
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Audacity Manual Title Page the lower frequencies while leaving most of the other frequencies alone. It is most effective if you don't try to boost too much; 12 dB is usually just right.
exact same vocal signal is present in both of the channels to begin with.
Noise Removal...
Echo...
A simple delay line.
This effect repeats the audio you have selected again and again, softer each time. There is a fixed time delay between each repeat.
First select the audio you want to apply the effect to. You may want to first add silence to the end of your track(s) so that the echo has plenty of time to die out. When you select "Echo..." from the Effect menu, Audacity will ask you for two numbers.
Removing noise is a two−step process. In the first step, you select a portion of your sound which contains all noise and no signal, in other words, select the part that's silent except for the noise.
Then choose Noise Removal... from the Effect menu and click Get Profile. Audacity learns from this selection what the noise sounds like, so it knows what to filter out later.
The first number is the amount of delay between the echos, in seconds. The second value is the decay factor, which is a number between 0 and 1.
A decay factor of 0 means no echo, and a decay factor of 1 means that each echo is just as loud as the original. A value of 0.5 means that its amplitude is cut in half each time, so it dies out slowly. Smaller values will make it die out even more quickly.
This effect is ideal for removing constant background noise such as fans, tape noise, or hums. It will not work very well for removing talking or music in the background.
Then, select all of the audio where you want the noise removed from and choose Noise
Removal... again. This time, click the "Remove
Noise" button. It may take a few seconds or longer depending on how much you selected.
If too much or not enough noise was removed, you can Undo (from the Edit menu) and try
Noise Removal... again with a different noise removal level. You don't have to get a new noise profile again if you think the first one was fine.
The Echo effect is very simple and is not intended to be used in place of a Reverb effect, which simulates the sound of a room, concert hall, stage, or other natural environment.
Removing noise usually results in some distortion. This is normal and there's virtually nothing you can do about it. When there's only a
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Audacity for MacOS and Windows comes with
Gverb, a free LASPA Reverb plug−in.
little bit of noise, and the signal (i.e. the voice or the music or whatever) is much louder than the noise, this effect works well and there's very little audible distortion. But when the noise is very Note that if you set the decay value to 1.0, you can use Echo to create loops that repeat as long as you want any never change volume.
loud, when the noise is variable, or when the signal is not much louder than the noise, then the result is often too distorted.
Fade In
Future versions of Audacity may include
Applies a linear fade−in to the selected audio. For
a logarithmic fade, use the envelope tool .
improved versions of this effect.
Phaser...
Fade Out
Applies a linear fade−out to the selected audio.
For a logarithmic fade, use the
FFT Filter...
.
The name "Phaser" comes from "Phase Shifter", because it works by combining phase−shifted signals with the original signal. The movement of the phase−shifted signals is controlled using a
Low Frequency Oscillator (LFO).
This is the most general type of filter. You define a curve that shows how much louder or quieter each frequency in the signal should be made.
If you're careful, you can use it to highlight exactly the frequencies you want. However, doing an FFT filter is more likely to result in artifacts, especially if the filter you draw is not smooth.
Reverse
This effect reverses the selected audio temporally; after the effect the end of the audio will be heard first and the beginning last. Some people reverse small portions of audio to make inappropriate language unintelligible, while others believe you can hear subliminal messages if you listen to speech backwards. You can also create interesting sound effects by recording natural events and reversing the audio.
Wahwah...
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Just like that guitar sound so popular in the
1970's.
This effect uses a moving bandpass filter to create its sound. A low frequency oscillator (LFO) is used to control the movement of the filter throughout the frequency spectrum.
The WahWah effect automatically adjusts the phase of the left and right channels when given a stereo recording, so that the effect seems to travel across the speakers.
VST Plug−ins
To use a VST plug−in effect, put the effect in the directory (folder) called "Plug−Ins", which should be in the same directory where Audacity resides. If there is no directory, create one. You will also need to download and unzip the VST Enabler to the same directory. The next time you launch
Audacity, any plug−ins you added will appear in the Effect menu.
Freeverb2...
Audacity for Mac OS and Windows comes with a
VST plug−in called Freeverb, which is in version
2 (hence "Freeverb2"). This effect implements a versatile and high−quality reverb effect.
Getting a good reverb sound depends a lot on the source audio and can take a lot of experimentation. One good strategy is to select a
If you set the dry level to 0 and the wet level to
−infinity, it's like standing right in front of the singer in a tiny room − all you can hear is the singer, and no reverb. A good place to start is to set both the dry level and wet level to 0 dB.
However, you may want to experiment with lowering the dry level while you are experimenting with the sound of the reverb.
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Audacity Manual Title Page small portion of audio (a few seconds) and try to add reverb. Listen to it, then Undo and try it again with different settings. Keep doing this until you've found the settings you like the sound of best, and then Undo one last time, Select All, then apply the effect to your entire recording.
The room size parameter is self−explanatory. The smallest room size setting creates a quick, bright reverb, while the largest setting creates a long, drawn−out, and dark reverb. The damping parameter controls how the sound bounces off the walls − i.e. if it is mostly reflected or absorbed.
There are a lot of parameters to Freeverb2: Room size, Damping, Predelay, Lowpass, Highpass,
Wet level, and Dry level.
The predelay controls the delay between the dry signal (unreverberated) and the wet signal
Let's start with the wet and dry levels. Freeverb works by taking your audio signal and modifying it to create the reverberated sound, i.e. the sound you hear echoing off the walls of the room. This is called the "wet" part of the effect.
(reverberated) − usually there is some predelay because of the time it takes sound waves to travel from the sound source to the nearest wall, and to the microphone. Larger predelays are suitable for creating an effect of a larger room.
Finally, the lowpass and highpass filters can be used to make the reverberated sound lower or higher. Increasing the lowpass filter filters out the This is mixed together with the original sound, which is called the "dry" part of the effect, to produce the combination of direct
(unreverberated) and indirect (reverberated) sound, which is what you would naturally hear. If you set the dry level to −infinity and the wet level to 0 dB, the result is something like standing outside of a concert hall: you can only hear the reverberated sound.
high frequencies, and similarly increasing the highpass filter filters out the low frequencies.
Nyquist Plugins
To use a Nyquist effect, put the effect in the directory (folder) called "Plug−Ins", which should be in the same directory where Audacity resides. Upon installation, some nyquist scripts are included, so
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Audacity Manual Title Page you needn't worry about creating this directory. The next time you launch Audacity, any plug−ins you added will appear in the Effect, Generate or Analyse menus.
LADSPA Plugins
These started out a a plugin format for Linux, but can now be used on Windows and OS X as well.
There are lots of free plugins available, and no enabler is needed. More information can be found on the web .
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Analyze Menu
Note: plugins that accept input but produce no output will be placed in the Analyze menu. By default, this menu is often empty.
Beat Finder no documentation available yet
Sample Analyze Nyquist Plugin ...
Will place labels that mark the beginning and end of a selection.
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Preferences
Audio I/O
•
The two drop−down list controls in this pane is where you configure which device Audacity should use for sound input and output. This basically means which sound card, USB sound device, etc you want to use. If your sound card support multiple sound inputs, e.g. has a
microphone input and a line−in, then you select these on the mixer toolbar
. No need to adjust
• this if Audacity is already playing to and recording from the correct place.
Record in Stereo: If this is checked, recordings you make in Audacity will be stereo, otherwise they will be monaural. Note that the interpretation of mono recordings depends on your system − on most systems making a mono recording of a stereo input will result in the two channels being mixed, but on other systems it could give you just the left channel, for
• example.
Play other tracks while recording new one: Check this box if you want to record multiple tracks over top of one another! Record the first track as usual. Then, with this box checked, click record again. The first track you recorded will play, but Audacity will also record a new track at the same time, maybe allowing you to sing harmony with yourself or add real−time sound effects to a recording.
You may notice that when you play the two tracks you recorded together, they aren't synchronized. This is normal and is not the fault of Audacity. To fix it, you will need to grab
• the
tool and slide one of the tracks around until it sounds right.
Hardware Playthrough (Mac Only): This sets up your computer to send the sound coming in to be recorded straight back out of the speakers, so you can hear what you are recording.
Hardware playthrough has no latency and takes no CPU, but is only possible if your input and output are on the same audio device, and that device supports it.
Windows and Linux users can enable this using your operating system's Mixer, by simply
• turning up the level for the input you are using and unmuting it.
Software Playthrough: This enables you to hear what you are recording by taking the data about to be recorded by audacity, and playing it back out of the sound card. This works with
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Audacity Manual Title Page any duplex sound card, or combination of sound devices, so you can record in through an external USB device and play back through the computer's built in sound device or vice versa.
Because of the delays in processing the audio on the computer, there will be some delay or
latency in the sound that you hear. It also needs some CPU power, so if you have an old machine and are getting breaks in your recordings try turning it off.
Quality
This panel sets the default sample rate and bit depth for new projects. It does not affect any existing project − to change the sample rate of an existing project, just click on the rate at the bottom of the window and select a new rate from the pop−up menu.
The bit depth affects imported material, if it's copied, as well as newly recorded material. The advantage of the 32−bit float resolution is that effects return material at a this resolution, which improves the final mix, because the computer has more precise material to work with. If you aren't doing any processing then you may want to save some space by setting this to 16 bit, if your hardware supports this.
File Formats
•
When importing uncompressed audio files...
♦
Make a copy of the file to edit: selecting this means that Audacity will run a little bit slower, but it will always have its own copy of any audio you are using in a project.
You can move, change, or throw away your files immediately after you open or
♦ import them into Audacity.
Edit the original in place: selecting this operation means that Audacity depends on your original audio files being there, and only stores changes you make to these files.
If you move, change, or throw away one of the files you imported into Audacity, your project may become unusable. However, because Audacity doesn't need to make copies of everything, it can import files much more quickly this way. If you want to send projects to other people or archive them, then select this option.
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•
Uncompressed Export Format: This lets you select the format that Audacity will use when you export uncompressed files, i.e. anything other than lossy formats, such as OGG and MP3.
Audacity can output a huge amount of different formats with the Other option, which lets you define any aspect of the multitude of different formats.
•
For most users, 16 bit WAV (Microsoft) or AIFF (Mac) files will be the most compatible.
Ogg Export Setup: Use this control to set the quality of Ogg Vorbis exporting. Ogg Vorbis is a compressed audio format similar to MP3, but free of patents and licensing fees. A normal quality Ogg Vorbis file is encoded with a quality setting of "5". Note that unlike MP3 encoding, Ogg Vorbis does not let you set a bitrate, because some audio clips are easier to
• compress than others. Increasing the quality will always increase the file size, however.
MP3 Export Setup: Use these controls to locate your MP3 encoder and set the quality of
MP3 encoding. Higher quality files take up more space, so you will need to find the level of quality you feel is the best compromise. For more information, see
.
Spectrograms
You can view any audio track as a Spectrogram instead of a Waveform by selecting one of the
Spectral views from the track's pop−up menu. This dialog lets you adjust some of the settings for these spectrograms.
•
FFT Size: The size of the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) affects how much vertical
(frequency) detail you see. Larger FFT sizes give you more low frequency resolution and less
• temporal resolution, and they are slower.
Grayscale: Select this for gray spectrograms instead of colored ones.
•
Maximum Frequency: Set this value anywhere from a couple of hundred hertz to half the sample rate (i.e. 22050 Hz if the sample rate is 44100 Hz). For some applications, such as speech recognition or pitch extraction, very high frequencies are not important (visually), so this allows you to hide these and only focus on the ones you care about.
Directories
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Use this panel to set the location of Audacity's temporary directory. Audacity uses this directory whenever you work on a project that you haven't saved as an Audacity Project (AUP file) yet. You have to restart Audacity (close and open it again) for changes to the temporary directory to take effect.
This directory can contain a lot of files and is used a lot, so choose a disk with plenty of free space to put it on. Never put it on a network drive.
Interface
•
Autoscroll while playing
page flips to the right when the cursor travels to the right hand end of the wave display, either during playback or recording. Always keeps the cursor on screen, but may cause breaks in
• recording or playback if you have a slow machine.
Always Allow Pausing
•
Update spectrogram while playing
Tries to keep the spectrogram updated while playing. This requires a lot of cpu power, and really isn't a good idea unless you're playing a really small piece or have a powerful CPU and plenty of RAM. In combination with Autoscroll while playing this can cause pauses during
• playback or recording.
Enable Edit Toolbar
Gives you a toolbar of a few useful functions. Check out the page on the
for
• more information.
Enable Mixer Toolbar
•
Turns on display of the Mixer Toolbar used to control soundcard mixer settings.
Enable Mixer Toolbar
Turns on display of the Meter Toolbar, with VU meters you can use to monitor the recording
• and playback levels of your project.
Quit Audacity upon closing last window
Sets Audacity to shut down when the last project window you are working is closed. If you turn this off then audacity will keep re−spawning new blank project windows until you do
•
File > Quit.
Enable dragging left and right selection edges
Lets you manipulate selections by clicking on the edges and dragging them along the
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• timeline.
Enable dragging left and right selection edges
Sets the transport control button order as:Pause, Play, Stop, Home, End, Record. Rather than:
•
Home, Play, Record, Pause, Stop, End.
Language
Lets you change the language of the menus and other onscreen text to the language of your choice. Simply choose the correct option from the drop−down list. Note that for languages with unusual character sets you need the correct fonts installed. If your menus come up all
•
???? that's what's wrong.
Minimum of dB mode display range
This sets up the scale used for logarithmic waveform displays. Because Decibels are logarithmic, it is impossible to have a 0 point on the scale, so some very quiet sounds will display as silence. If you you reduce this effect by increasing the range, then the louder part of the scale gets squashed, so there is a choice of settings for different uses. −48dB is a good compromise for general work.
Keyboard
•
Commands/Key Combination List
All commands in Audacity that can be triggered by a keyboard shortcut are listed here. Click on the shortcut and the assigned keystroke is highlighted in the command/shortcut list. Click on the "Clear" button to erase the keystroke assigned to the function selected in the
•
Commands column.
Adding new shortcuts/changing shortcuts
Click on the command in the list. Click in to the field next to the "Set" button and press any key or combination of command key(Shift,CTRL,ALT) and alphanumeric key(everything else). The description of that key or key combo will appear in the field or replace the existing keystroke. By clicking on the "Set" button, you can add or change this key or key combo as a
• shortcut to the function selected in the Commands list.
Saving your setup You can export your keyboard shortcut settings for safekeeping or to import into audacity on another machine. Use Save... to save you settings to a file, Load... to load a saved settings file, and Defaults to restore the default audacity settings.
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Head over to
this page for step−by−step description of the dialog and how to edit the
command/keyboard combination list with a text editor.
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File Formats
Audacity Project format (AUP) Sun Au / NeXT
Audacity projects are stored in an AUP file, which is a format that has been highly optimized for Audacity so that it can open and save projects extremely quickly. In order to achieve this speed,
Audacity breaks larger audio files into several smaller pieces and stores these pieces in a directory with a similar name as the project. For example, if you name a project "chanson", then
Audacity will create a project file called chanson.aup
which stores the general information about your project, and it will store your audio in several files inside a directory called chanson_data
. The Audacity Project format is not compatible with any other audio programs, so when you are finished working on a project and you want to be able to edit the audio in another program, select
This is the default audio format on Sun and
NeXT computers, and it is usually u−law compressed so not very high quality. U−law compression is a very simple, fast but low quality way to reduce the size of the audio by about 50%.
It is widely used in American telephone systems.
This format was one of the first audio formats supported by Web browsers, and it is still often used for short sound effects where quality is not as important. Audacity can read this format, and write files either in 8−bit u−law compressed or
16−bit uncompressed variants.
IRCAM (Institut de Recherce et Coordination
Acoustique/Musique)
WAV (Windows Wave format)
This is a very general file format that is commonly used by computer music researchers.
Audacity can read this format.
This is the default uncompressed audio format on
Windows, and is supported on almost all computer systems. It can also be lightly
MP3 (MPEG I, layer 3) compressed (about 4:1) using the ADPCM codec, but this is less widely supported on non−windows
This is a compressed audio format that is a very popular way to store music. It can compress
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AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) audio by a factor of 10:1 with little degradation in quality. Audacity can both import and export this format. For more information on how to export
MP3 files from within Audacity, see
This is the default uncompressed audio format on the Macintosh, and it is supported by most computer systems, but it is not quite as common as the WAV format. Audacity can read and write this format.
Ogg Vorbis
This is a new compressed audio format that was designed to be a free alternative to MP3 files.
Ogg Vorbis files are not as common, but they are about the same size as MP3 with better quality and no patent restrictions. Audacity can import and export this format.
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Exporting MP3/OGG Files
Audacity has OGG export and import functionality built in. You can set the quality of the exported
OGG files in the preferences. OGG is vastly superior to MP3, especially at lower bitrates.
OGG should be preferred to MP3, except in situations in which MP3 is required. This can be the case for external players, which do not support OGG.
Audacity cannot encode MP3 files by itself, because the MP3 encoding algorithm is patented and cannot legally be used in free programs. However, Audacity has been programmed to recognize other existing MP3 encoders that you can download separately. All you have to do is obtain the appropriate MP3 encoder for your computer and then show Audacity where it is located.
If you use... You need to...
Windows
Download LAME and look for the file called lame_enc.dll. You can find binary distribution on the net by Google searching for "lame compile download binary" or visiting this list of mirrors .
Linux/Unix
Download LAME from it's home page and compile it as a shared object, then look for the file called libmp3lame.so (usually in /usr/local/lib).
Macintosh Download the appropriate LAMELib from here .
For links to these MP3 encoders, go to the Audacity web page ( http://audacity.sourceforge.net
) and click on the link for your operating system.
The first time you try to export an MP3 file, Audacity will ask you to locate your MP3 encoder.
Locate the file indicated above. From then on, Audacity will not need to ask you again and you will be able to export MP3 files easily!
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Support for more MP3 encoders may be coming in the future. Let us know if there is a particular
MP3 encoder you want supported.
What is an MP3 file and how does it differ from
WAV and AIFF files?
Why doesn't Audacity ship with an MP3 encoder?
MP3 (MPEG II, layer 3) is a popular format for storing music and other audio. A typical MP3 file file, but it sounds very similar. MP3 encoders make use of psychoacoustic models to, in effect,
"throw away" the parts of the sound that are very hard to hear, while leaving the loudest and most important parts alone.
Unfortunately, the algorithm to encode or create
MP3 files is patented, and Audacity would not be is one tenth the size of the original WAV or AIFF able to include an MP3 exporting algorithm without either charging a fee or violating the law in many countries.
Unfortunately, no MP3 encoder is perfect, and so an MP3 file will never sound quite as good as the original. Still, most people find that the quality of an MP3 file is virtually indistinguishable from a
CD when played on headphones or on small computer speakers, which is why the format is so popular.
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Toolbars
I/O Sliders and Input Selector
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Main Toolbar Edit Toolbar Input/Output
Main Toolbar
Selection Tool
Cursor to Start
This is the main tool you use to select audio.
Click in a track to position the cursor, or click and drag to select a range of audio. If you drag from one track to another, you can select multiple tracks. Extend a selection by shift−clicking a new point in the track.
Places the cursor at the start of the project.
SHIFT + click expands the selection to the start of the project.
Playback will always begin at the position of the selection cursor. If a range of audio is selected, only the selected range will play.
Play Button
Envelope Tool
The envelope tool gives you detailed control over how tracks fade in and out, right in the main track window. When the envelope tool is selected, the amplitude envelope of each track is highlighted in a green line, with control points at the beginning and end of each track. To change a control point, click it and drag it to a new position. To add a new point, click
Press the play button to listen to the audio in your project. You can also hit the spacebar to start or stop playback. Playback begins at the current cursor position. If a region of audio is selected, only the selected region will play. To
quickly play the entire project, execute Select
All before playing. If there are multiple tracks
going to the same channel in your project, they will be mixed automatically for playback.
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Audacity Manual Title Page anywhere in the track where there is not already a control point. To remove a point, click on it and drag it outside of the track until it disappears, then release.
Time Shift Tool
Record Button
Press the record button to record a new track from your computer's sound input device. Use
to configure the recording options. In particular, there is an option to record stereo or mono, and there is an option to play the other tracks while recording.
This tool allows you to change the relative positioning of tracks relative to one another in time. To use this tool, simply click in a track and drag it to the left or right. To align two tracks together or reset their time shift back to
zero, use the Align Tracks Together
commands.
Recording always happens at the project's sample rate.
Pause Button
Zoom Tool
Will pause during playback, or during recording. Press again to unpause.
This tool allows you to zoom in or out of a specific part of the audio. To zoom in, click anywhere in the audio. To zoom out, right−click or shift−click. If you have a middle button, you can middle−click to do the same thing as
Stop Button
In addition, you can zoom into a region by clicking and dragging the mouse to highlight the region you want to see, then releasing the mouse button.
Press the stop button or hit the spacebar to stop playback immediately.
Cursor to End
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Draw Tool
Enables the user to draw in to the actual waveforms. This is especially useful to eliminate small pops and clicks from material.
ALT + click smoothes a area of audio
CTRL + click & hold edits only one sample, no matter whether you move the mouse left or right.
Places the cursor at the end of the project.
SHIFT + click expands the selection to the end of the project.
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Main Toolbar Edit Toolbar Input/Output
Mixer Toolbar
Output Input Input Selector
These sliders control the mixer settings of the soundcard in your system.
The sliders will jump to zero (left most position) if the drivers do not expose these functions. This is the case with some digital I/O cards from RME and possibly others as well. Generally most cards that have a custom mixer application rather than the standard OS volume control won't work with this function of audacity. On these cards you will not be able to control the anything with these sliders, and you will need to set up the recording levels and the recording source using the card's mixer program.
Output Slider Input Slider
This is the left hand slider that lets you control the output level of your soundcard. It actually controls the output setting of the soundcard driver.
This is the right hand slider that lets you control the level of the input selected in the Input Selector. It actually controls the recording level setting of the soundcard driver.
Should your output sound distorted, this is not the first place to look. You might get lucky though, so give it a quick slide. Usually however, the distortion comes from the mix of your project clipping. You actually need to reduce the level of your tracks. It is suggested you reduce every track by the same amount.
What you record is also determined in the mixer settings on your soundcard. There you can switch certain sources on and off, such as the Line Input, the Microphone Input or the CD Audio.
After selecting the corresponding input source with the Input Selector, you can control the level of the recording with this slider. Use the VU Meters on the Meter Toolbar to get the correct recording level.
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Should your input sound distorted, you should lower this slider until no distortion can be heard, and the VU Meters do not hit the end of their travel.
Input Selector
Pick the input source you wish to record from. All these items are exposed by the soundcard driver, so the this of options will vary with different soundcards.
Here is an example of an ESS
1969 soundcard with the Line In input selected.
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Main Toolbar Edit Toolbar Input/Output
Edit Toolbar
All these tools perform the exact same function, as those accessible through the
Cut Undo
Removes the selected audio data and places it on the clipboard. Only one "thing" can be on the clipboard at a time, but it may contain multiple tracks.
This will undo the last editing operation you performed to your project. Audacity currently supports full unlimited undo − meaning you can undo every editing operation back to the last time the document was saved.
Copy
Redo
Copies the selected audio data to the clipboard without removing it from the project.
Paste
This will redo any editing operations that were just undone. After you perform a new editing operation, including simply resizing a track, you can no longer redo the operations that were undone.
Inserts whatever is on the clipboard at the position of the selection cursor in the project, replacing whatever audio data is currently selected, if any.
Zoom In
Zoom Out
Trim
Zoom to Selection
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Deletes everything but the selection.
Silence
Erases the audio data currently selected, replacing it with silence instead of removing it completely.
Zoom to entire Project
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Tracks
Audio Track Controls
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Audio tracks contain digitally sampled sounds. In Audacity, a channels of sound is represented by one mono audio track, a two channel sound by one stereo audio track. Each audio track has a
sample rate: common values include 8000 (telephone),
16000 (speech), 22050 (many games of recent years), 44100
(CD Audio), and 48000
(DAT).
From Audacity 1.2 on, you can specify a different sample rate for each track. You can import audio of any sample rate or bit depth and Audacity will resample and convert it to the project rate and bit depth on the fly, as well as upon
Export. You can choose different sample rate conversion qualities for playback and Exporting.
Audio Tracks
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(Note that in Audacity 1.0, all tracks must be at the same sample rate as the project.)
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Label Tracks
Label Tracks can be used to annotate an audio file. They can be used for lyrics, markers, or notes, and they can even be used to save selections.
To create a Label Track, select New Label
Track from the
. Alternatively, simply click or select where you would like to place a label, and choose Add Label at Selection
from the Project Menu , and a Label Track will
be created automatically if one doesn't already exist.
To add a new label, click or select where you want the new label to appear, then select Add
Label at Selection from the
, then type the name of the label, and finally press
Enter or click outside of the label.
To edit the name of a label, click anywhere in it. Zoom in first if there are too many labels crowded together and you are unable to click on the one you want. When a label is selected for editing, it looks like the first label below:
When editing the name of a label, you are limited to using just the backspace key for editing. There is no way to move the insertion point to append a letter to the beginning of a label.
Once a label is selected, you can move to the
next label by pressing Tab, and move to the previous label by pressing Shift−Tab.
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To delete a label or multiple labels, select the area containing the label flags you wish to delete, and choose Silence from the
.
Alternatively you can delete an individual label by clicking on it and pressing Backspace until you have deleted all of the characters in the label, then pressing Enter.
You can save a selection in a label. When you create a new label, the left selection edge determines the position of the label's flag.
However, the right selection edge is also stored in the label, and when you click on it, the full original selection will be restored.
To move labels, use the normal editing commands like Cut, Copy, Paste, Delete, and
Silence.
If you wish to apply this selection to only a subset of the tracks, shift−click in the label area to the left of each track's waveform to change whether each track is part of the selection or not.
Exporting and Importing label tracks
Label Tracks are saved when you save an
Audacity Project, so if you just want to continue using the labels along with the same file, just and also provides a way to mass−edit the labels if necessary.
save a project. But you can also export the labels to a simple text file, and import them.
To export a Label Track, choose Export Labels...
from the File Menu . The exported file will
This allows you to save information about the locations of events in an audio file for use in another program, contain one line per label, starting with the time offset in seconds, then a tab, and then the name of the label, for example :
1.217995 Bass intro
3.921073 Guitar enters
7.584454 Drums enter
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11.070002 Chorus
To import a Label Track, choose Import Labels... from the File Menu .
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Note Tracks
Note tracks display data loaded from a MIDI file.
They are currently not editable or playable.
It's best to ignore the note tracks for now until further notice.
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Time Tracks
This track consists of a single envelope.
It controls the playback speed within a given range, i.e. it facilitates
envelope−based resampling. The envelope handing is exactly the same as for the volume envelope.
Clicking on the track panel reveals a few
options, similar to the ones of the track panel of an audio track
.
"Set Range" lets you set the minimum and maximum pitch change. It is expressed in percentage values relative to 100%.
Start by choosing New Time Track from the Project Menu. Then change the range of time warping by clicking on the Track
Pop−Down Menu and choosing Set Range
(an option which only appears for Time
Tracks)
To edit the time warping, choose the envelope tool from the Control Toolbar − the same tool you use to edit amplitude envelopes in Audio Tracks. Click to create and edit control points. Drag points off the track to delete them.
The converter used will be the one(s) set up on the
You can make separate choices for
The Time Track has a ruler. As you edit the warping, the ruler will warp to show you at what time playback will reach each place in the audio.
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Realtime (playback) and High Quality
(exporting), trading speed against quality.
Older computers may be incapable of playing audio in real−time that makes use of a Time Track, however you can always
Export the file as a WAV and then playback the WAV file later.
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Track Delete Button
Clicking on this button deletes
the track. This action is undoable.
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Vertical Track Resizing
For horizontal resizing, which is called zooming, visit the View Menu page.
Vertically resizing a track is fairly simple.
•
Click and hold the mouse button on the
•
resizing handle (see figure),
move mouse up or down until the track has
• the wanted vertical size
release mouse button
Note:
Stereo tracks have two resize handles. The one beneath the upper track lets you resize both tracks in relation to one another.
The resize handle beneath the lower track resizes both tracks equally the same way. It changes the overall vertical size of the whole stereo track.
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Pop−Down Menu
Name Edit the name of the track
Move Track Up/Down Move Track Up or Down in the display
Waveform Traditional display of audio material. It displays the amplitude of the audio over time. This is the default display mode.
Waveform (dB) Like Waveform, but logarithmic instead of linear vertical units . It displays the amplitude in dB of the audio over time.
Spectrum Displays the frequency spectrum of the audio over time.
Pitch (EAC) Tries to detect the pitch of the current audio and displays that information over time.
Mono Set playback of this single channel track on the left and right channels.
Left Channel Set playback of this single channel track on the left channel.
Right Channel Set playback of single channel track on the right channel.
Make Stereo Track The selected track and that beneath it is turned in to one stereo track.
Split Stereo Track Turn one stereo track in to two single channel
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Set Sample Format Pick the sample format for this track. The result is that all newly written data is written in this format, no matter what format the original material was in. Newly written data can be produced by effects and generator plugins for example.
Set Rate Set the sample rate of this track. Upon import, the track sample rate is set to that of the imported material. On playback or exporting the audio will be re−sampled to the project rate on the fly. This option can be useful to change the speed and pitch of audio, or if the sample rate of the source was wrong.
Back to the Stuff On Screen page
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Track Solo Button
Clicking on this button will switch this track to solo mode. This action is not reversible with the Undo function, but you can un−solo a track simply by clicking it again.
In solo mode, only tracks that have the solo button activated ( turning the button
red
), will be played.
To deactivate the solo mode for that track, click on the button again. (button turns grey again)
The state of the solo buttons is NOT saved in the project file, and it does not affect
Exporting or Mixing.
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Track Mute Button
Clicking on this button will mute this track , i.e. this track is switched off without deleting it. This action is not reversible with the Undo function, however you can un−mute a track just by clicking the mute button again.
Muted tracks are easy to spot, because their Mute buttons are green .
To unmute the track, click on the button again. (button turns grey again)
The state of the mute buttons is NOT saved in the project file, and it does not affect mixing (i.e. muted tracks are still mixed when you export or Quick Mix).
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Delete Pop−Down Menu Solo Mute Gain and Panning Controls Vertical Track Resizing
Gain and Panning Controls
Gain (Volume)
This slider controls the track volume, or rather the overall gain of that particular track.
It's default position is in the middle, as shown in the picture to the left. This setting represents 0 dB.
Tip:
Normally the control moves in increments of 3 dB.
Hold down Shift to adjust by 1 dB at a time.
Pan
This slider set the panning position of the track in the stereo field.
It's default position is in the middle, as shown in the picture to the left.
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Keyboard Shortcuts
!!Apple MacOS X users!! CTRL = Command
File Commands Navigation, Playback & Recording
New Project
CTRL+N
Open Project
CTRL+O
Close Project
CTRL+W
Save Project
CTRL+S
Preferences
CTRL+P
Editing Tools
Selection Tool
Envelope Tool
Editing Tool
Zoom Tool
Timeshift Tool
Multi Tool cycle tool forward
F5
F6
D
F1
F2
F3
F4
Play/Stop
Loop
Pause
Record
Preview 1 second
Play From Cursor To
Selection
Zoom In
Zoom Normal
Zoom Out
Fit In Window
R
1
L
P
SPACE
SHIFT+SPACE
B
CTRL+1
CTRL+2
CTRL+3
CTRL+F
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cycle tool backward
A
Edit Commands
Undo
Redo (Windows)
Redo (Mac/Unix)
Cut
Copy
Paste
Delete
Silence
Duplicate
Select All
CTRL+Z
CTRL+Y
CTRL+SHIFT+Z
CTRL+X
CTRL+C
CTRL+V
CTRL+K
DELETE
CTRL+L
CTRL+D
CTRL+A
Fit Vertically
Zoom to Selection
Import Audio
Create Label
Repeat Last Effect
Find Zero Crossings
Z
CTRL+SHIFT+F
CTRL+E
CTRL+I
CTRL+B
CTRL+R
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Edit or Create
Keyboard Shortcuts
Where ?
In the preferences dialog , go to the
keyboard section or edit the keyboard configuration file directly
with a text editor. You will find this file in the directory where you installed Audacity. Its filename is Audacity−keys.xml .
Audacity will NOT load this keymap upon startup, but save them in the registry(Windows). Should you make changes to the Audacity.xml file with a text editor, you'll need to load that shortcut file with the "Load" button to make Audacity use them. Thus you can save your keymaps under any filename with an XML extension and keep different keymaps around for different purposes.
Audacity will NOT store the current keymap in the file Audacity.xml. Should you want to make changes to the current keymap with a text editor, you'll have to use the "Save" button to save that keymap to an XML file first. After editing it you'll have to "Load" it again.
Editing and Creating Shortcuts with the Preferences Dialog
Changing a shortcut:
1. Click on the command in the list. The command to be changed is now highlighted.
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2. Click in to the box to left of the
Set button. If a shortcut was assigned to the command previously, it will be displayed in this box.
3. Hit the key or key combination you wish to assign to this command.
Then processed to the next step.
4. Click on the
Set button to assign the chosen key or key combination to the chosen command.
Clearing a shortcut:
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1. Click on the command in the list. The command to be cleared is now highlighted.
2. Click on the clear button to clear the command.
Editing and Creating Shortcuts with a text editor
The keyboard shortcuts you were editing with the dialog are stored in a simple XML file. Thus, you can edit it with any text editor.
Each keyboard map starts with
<audacitykeyboard audacityversion="1.2">
and ends with
</audacitykeyboard>
Each command is defined with the command tag. An example :
<command name="Undo" label="Undo" key="Ctrl+Z" />.
name
The actual command as Audacity understands it.
label
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Command description as seen in the Preferences keyboard map editor.
key
This is the actual shortcut. Check out what the format is in the Preferences dialog.
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How do effects work in Audacity ?
1. Select some audio
Use the mouse or
to select some audio. You can listen to that selection as many times as you like and adjust the boundaries of the selection.
2. Select an effect
You can pick any of the internal effects or a LADSPA or Nyquist plugin loaded by audacity.
Windows & Mac users can also use VST plugins via the VST Enabler from www.audacityteam.org/vst/ .
3. Tweak the parameters to your liking
Play around, go wild, honk your horn. Make those tough decisions without telling anyone why.
4. Let the software work
Hit the OK button. Or hit the Cancel button if you're unsure about something, like what time you were supposed to take the pizza out of the oven.
5. Not happy ? UNDO
That effect didn't cut it ? Did that delay show up too late and you wondered where the summer went
? No problem.
Hit UNDO in the Edit menu (or press CTRL+Z).
Then go back to 3. In fact you can hit undo so many times, YOU might disappear. Or perhaps just all your edits. Who knows.
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Basic Calculus of
Acoustics
This is so terribly useful for so many things. You can use this stuff to calculate just how bad parallel walls are for sound, because of Standing Waves. What's that ? Coming attractions include exciting info on how to improve the acoustics of your room and what standing waves, bass traps and reflecting will do for your listening karma.
You may enjoy finding out that a $1000 subwoofer won't work in a small 3x3 meter room, 'cause the big energy bass action will happen beyond your walls. After all, the first energy peak happens at 1/4 of wavelength. Check it for yourself and get smart the next time you buy those 'gotta get buried with/under/in them' speakers.
This all happens in plain fresh air:
The speed of sound is 343 meters per second at 20 degrees Celsius
+/− 0.6 m/s for every degree Celsius more/less ( −> 340 m/s at 15 degrees Celcius)
c =
speed of sound =
lambda
wave length
* f
* frequency
x = (1000 / c )
time [milliseconds] = time[ms] for one meter *
Examples (at 20 degrees Celsius > c = 343 m/s):
* y
distance
[meters]
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0.34
3.43
6
10
50 time
[milliseconds]
1
10
18
29
188
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Reverb
What is Reverb ?
A Reverb simulates the component of sound that results from reflections from surrounding walls or objects. It is in effect a room simulator. Some people think it's just a delay effect with some filters, but it's way more complex than that. Reverb effects (software plugins or external hardware units) provide an interface to their changeable parameters that need some explaining. Let's look at a simple room first.
Basic Simulation of a Room
Our model is a simple room with four straight walls, a sound source and a listener. In Figure 1 the arrows stand for the path of traveling sound.
The listener hears the DIRECT signal first. The DIRECT signal is also referred to as the DRY part of the signal when using any effect. Most digital reverbs produce two parts: The Early Reflections and the Reverb component.
I. Early Reflections
The first Early Reflection reaches the listener milliseconds after the direct signal does.
The path of the Early Reflections is longer. The difference in time between the arrival of the direct signal and the first Early Reflections is measured in milliseconds.
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II. Reverb
Figure 1
The sound reflects off the walls and objects in the room, and in time individual reflections disappear and the Reverb develops.
Predelay
The time between the reception of the DIRECT signal by the listener and start of the Reverb portion of the effect is called Predelay. This is a parameter in many digital reverb effects, and it is expressed in milliseconds (ms).
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Reverb Time
The time difference between switching off any sound generator and the level of the reverb resulting from that sound dropping by 60dB is called RT60.
This is usually referred to as the Reverb Time.
When anyone refers to the reverb time of a real room or that of a digital reverb, RT60 is what they're talking about.
Most digital reverbs feature this as a parameter.
Figure 1
Common parameters of a digital Reverb
Early Reflections Usually controlled via Room type and/or Room Size parameters.
The EARLY REFLECTIONS enable the human brain to quickly identify the room size. They are therefore the most critical part of a reverb effect, if a room simulation is the goal.
Predelay Parameter Range : 0 to x milliseconds
Time between Direct Signal and start of Reverb portion.
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The more space between you and walls or other reflective objects, the greater the Predelay.
Reverb Time Parameter Range : 0.1 to x.x seconds
The greater the enclosed(!) volume of the space you're in, the longer the reverb time. This is of course true only to a certain extent. The larger the room or chamber, the louder your source signal needs to be to produce any significant level of reverb tail. A good way to demonstrate this is to visit some huge cathedral and talk quietly. Then yell a bit and you'll actually hear some significantly loud reverb. The
RT60 value is measured with a noise impulse, but the level at which that impulse was sent out should be known too.
Many reverb effects let you set different reverb times for different frequency bands. Most reverb units on PC and Mac architectures provide two bands, so you get to set the reverb time for each frequency band individually.
Reverb Damping Usually a Highshelf and/or a Lowshelf EQ with variable Frequency.
These EQs are applied continuously to an evolving reverb of a piece of audio. Over time, as the reverb fades, so do certain frequencies, either in the lower or higher frequency range. The more less−reflective surfaces the sound bounces around from, the more the reverb is dampened the higher frequencies.
Freeverb features a Damping parameter that dampens the upper frequencies.
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Reverb EQ Usually a Highshelf and/or Lowshelf EQ with variable Frequency.
These EQs are only applied to the output of the reverb or perhaps even just the reverb portion of the Reverb effect. Some reverbs have
Highshelf and Lowshelf EQs for the Early Reflections as well.
Freeverb has both a Hicut and Lowcut parameter.
Here's a screenshot taken from the reverb plugin Renaissance Reverberator by Waves .
reproduced with permission
Here we have the Highshelf and Lowshelf EQs for Damping(left) and for the final output(right). The upper middle display depicts the Early Reflections placement and level, as well as the Reverb portion start and fading. Above this display is the Reverb Type selector. This changes the placement and level of the Early Reflections. The Size slider has influence on the Early Reflections as well.
Blank concrete will reflect sound quite well across the frequency spectrum. A large thick curtain or padded walls will reflect sound poorly. A large club filled with people sounds completely different
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Delay
What is a Delay ?
This effect uses a RAM buffer to store the audio for a certain amount of time, after which it outputs this audio.
The RAM buffer will not always be just large enough to store the amount of audio set by the current delay time, but will actually be considerably larger sometimes, because many delay effects allow for their delay parameter to automated.
Multi−Tap Delays
This effect simply incorporates several discrete delay lines, each with its own delay time, level(amplitude) and panning. The feedback parameter is usually shared by all delays in a multi−tap delay. Some multi−tap delays feature a modulation section that modulates the delay times, which can
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Common parameters of a digital Delay
Delay Time Parameter Range : 0.000 to xxx.xxx seconds
The upper boundary of this parameter(xxx.xxx) depends on the amount of RAM in the hardware unit, or the amount of RAM reserved by the software plugin. For software plugins, the programmers or designers of the plugin set this upper boundary.
The delay software plugin Supertap by Waves for example comes in two flavours on Protools TDM systems. One allows for delays of up to two seconds, but another version accommodates delay times of up to six seconds. This is due to the availability of RAM on the DSP hardware of a TDM system. The native(−>CPU) version of this plugin for Windows for example only allows for delays of up to four seconds in length, but there are delay plugins that allow for delays of several minutes.
Feedback Today's delay units and plugins will feature one of several different types of feedback parameters :
a) Percentage Range : 0 to 99(or 100)%
This is used by most hardware units and some software plugins. It determines the amount of a delayed signal to be sent back to the
RAM buffer. The same delay time is applied. This is the most common parameter type for feedback.
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b) Decay Time : 0.1 to xx seconds
A slightly different approach. The plugin or hardware unit determines the amount of delayed signal, that it sends back in to its
RAM buffer, itself. Some may find this more intuitive. It isn't widely used however.
c) Feedback Delay Time : 0.000 to xxx.xxx seconds
This is like an additional delay line that takes the already delayed signal as input. This kind of parameter also requires a level setting, which is usually a percentage parameter, like a).
EQs & Filters Many delay plugins feature highshelf and/or lowshelf EQs, or they feature highpass and/or lowpass filters. These EQs or filters usually process each delay. The idea behind this is usually to simulate distance, because with increasing distance, the lower and higher frequencies are dampened.
Hi− & Lowshelf EQs
•
Gain : −xx to xx
•
dB
Frequency: 20 Hz
− 20 kHz
Low− & Highpass Filters
•
Frequency: 20 Hz − 20 kHz
•
Filter Strength : 6, 12, 18 or
24 dB/Octave
PANNING These are the most common types of stereo panning parameters you'll find.
LEFT RIGHT LEFT RIGHT LEFT RIGHT
−63 +64 0% 100% −100% 100%
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Simply a panning control for the delay. The feedback parameter may also have its own panning control.
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Chorus
What is a Chorus ?
A chorus is a
Delay for which the delay time is modulated by an LFO ( Low Frequency Oscillator).
The most used LFO waveforms are sine and triangle.
Most modern chorus effect unit, be they plugins or hardware based, also spread the effect signal across the stereo field. Sometimes a parameter to control the depth and other behaviours may be encountered.
The effect can produce interesting sounds, one of which is to produce the illusion of more than one instance of the instrument/vocalist being present. What you get out of this effect, largely depends on your desire to experiment.
Play with the parameters one at a time and experiment.
Common parameters of a Chorus
Delay Time Parameter Range : 0.0 to xxx.xx milliseconds
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This is your normal delay parameter.
Modulation Range Parameter Range : 0−100% or sometimes in milliseconds
This determines the maximum amount of modulation applied to the delay time.
Modulation Rate Parameter Range : 0 − 20 Hz (frequency)
Also sometimes referred to as the LFO frequency. Higher frequencies produce extreme effects.
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Uncompressed:
A simple sine wave that drops off by 6 dB at half time, to demonstrate how some compressors handle signals.
Compressor
After:
The attack part of where the compressor is working is clearly visible at the start of the audio.
The release part still affects some audio that is beneath the threshold as the compressors gain change slowly ebbs out and the material fades back to normal level.
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Processors and Effects
A
Reverb usually gives you the choice of how
much effects signal(also called WET part) and how much of the original signal(also called DRY part) you'd like to the plugin to output.
Not only do they output 100% WET signal, but nobody usually mixes the unprocessed signals with the processed either. They do so with
signals.
A processor doesn't have this option by nature.
The Equalizer and the Compressor
are processors. To mix the original signal and the processed signal doesn't make sense for these processors. Their output is always 100% WET.
Processors are usually placed in an INSERT, which means they sit in the channel. The EQs on your stereo or soundcard mixer work like this.
The signal passes through them.
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Frequently Asked Questions
General
1. Is Audacity really free? Why?
2. Who developed Audacity?
3. How can I help to improve Audacity?
4. I found a bug! Now what?
5. Can I include or sell Audacity on a CDROM ?
Installation
1. Windows: What do I do with the .exe file?
2. Windows: How do I uninstall Audacity?
3. Mac: What do I do with the .sit file?
4. Unix: Why do I get failed dependencies when installing from the RPM?
5. Unix: Why do I get an error while loading the shared library libwx_gtk.so?
Using Audacity
1. How do I mix two tracks together?
2. Can I remove the vocals from a recording?
3. When I try to record harmonies with myself, why are the two tracks out of sync?
4. Why doesn't Audacity ship with an MP3 encoder?
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GENERAL
1. Is Audacity really free? Why?
Yes, in almost all senses. Audacity is not only distributed free of charge, but you are also free to do almost anything you want with it.
Audacity is distributed under the terms of the General Public License (GPL).
You are free to use this program for personal or commercial purposes.
You are also free to give it away or sell it. The source code to this program is freely available on the web, and you are free to modify it for your own use,
however any changes you make must also be distributed under the GPL.
Audacity was build using wxWidgets, a software library which is released under the less−restrictive LGPL. For more information, please visit http://www.wxwidgets.org.
The authors of Audacity decided to release it under the GPL for many reasons.
Some of us do it out of generosity. Some of us do it for moral reasons, because we feel that all software should be free, while others of us believe that there is a need for both free and commercial software in the world. One reason Audacity is free is so that it will be more popular. Many of us would rather see a million people happily using Audacity for free than have a thousand people pay us. Most users are more friendly when they get something for free.
Yet another reason is that it encourages collaboration. If Audacity was shareware, it is unlikely that dozens of people around the world would have contributed code, bug fixes, documentation, and graphics.
2. Who Developed Audacity?
Audacity was started in the fall of 1999 by Dominic Mazzoni while he was a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA, USA. He was working on a research project with his advisor, Professor Roger Dannenberg, and they needed a tool that would let them visualize audio analysis algorithms. Over time, this program developed into a general audio editor, and other people started helping out. Today,
Audacity is developed using Sourceforge, an online site that allows people around the world to collaborate on free software projects. See http://www.sourceforge.net for more information. Dozens of people have contributed to Audacity, and progress is continually accelerating.
3. How can I help to improve Audacity?
There are many ways you can help. If you are a programmer and you know C++, we can always use more developers. We especially need more Windows and MacOS programmers, as many of the current developers prefer Linux.
If you are bilingual, you can help us translate Audacity into another language.
If you are good at writing, you can help us write documentation and tutorials.
Finally, anyone can submit bug reports and suggestions. The more detailed, the better.
If you would like to help out in any one of these ways, please e−mail the developers at audacity−[email protected]. You may also want to go to the Sourceforge web site and join the mailing list yourself.
4. I found a bug! Now what?
The most important thing when reporting a bug is to be as specific as possible. Give us enough information that we can reproduce the bug ourselves, otherwise it's unlikely that we'll be able to fix it.
Be sure to let us know what operating system you run (such as Windows 98, MacOS 9.1,
Fedora Linux 3, etc.) and any other information about your computer that you think might be relevant.
Then, can you reproduce the bug? If it happens consistently, tell us the exact sequence of events which causes the bug to occur. If you get an error message, make sure you send us the exact text of the error message.
We want to squash all of the bugs! Thanks for taking the time to help us track them down.
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5. Can I include or sell Audacity on a CDROM ?
Basically the same as the first question, so that is a big YES. You are also free to do almost anything you want with it. We do like to hear about it of course, but as long as you comply with the GNU Public License, you'll be ok. This means that you need to make any changes you make to Audacity available, including the source code. The source code doesn't need to be on the CDROM, but it should be available via the internet for example.
INSTALLATION
1. Windows: What do I do with the .exe file?
From the browser, select the option to "Run from current location". This launches the Audacity setup program, which will install the Audacity program files and create an entry in the start menu.
If you already downloaded the file, just double−click on it to start the installer.
If you prefer not to use the Installer program, you can also download Audacity as a ZIP file, which you can decompress using WinZip or any other extraction program.
2. Windows: How do I uninstall Audacity?
Audacity can be uninstalled by opening Add/Remove Programs in the Control Panel. Select
"Audacity" from the list and click the button "Add/Remove". This launches the Audacity uninstall program.
3. Mac: What do I do with the .sit file?
You need a recent version of StuffIt Expander. StuffIt Expander comes with all Macintoshes and is usually configured by default with all Mac web browsers. If Audacity does not decompress automatically, drag "audacity.sit" to StuffIt Expander to decompress it.
There is no need to install Audacity. Just drag the Audacity folder to your Applications folder, or wherever else you would like to put it. To uninstall, just drag the entire folder to the trash.
4. Unix: Why do I get failed dependencies when installing from the RPM?
First, ensure that the wxGTK is installed; a link can be found from our Linux page − http://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/linux. Be sure that you use the appropriate version of wxGTK − Audacity 1.2.x requires wxGTK 2.4.x, and it will not work with any other version.
5. Unix: Why do I get an error while loading the shared library libwx_gtk−2.4.so?
This could be one of two problems:
− If you installed the wxWidgets RPM, be sure to run "ldconfig" (as root) so your system knows
about the new library.
− If you installed wxWidgets from source, it may have been installed in /usr/local, but /usr/local/lib
may not be in your library path. Add /usr/local/lib to the file "/etc/ld.so.conf" and then run
"ldconfig". You may also want to add "/usr/local/bin" to your path, so that programs can find the
"wx−config" utility.
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USING AUDACITY
1. How do I mix two tracks together?
Audacity mixes automatically. All you have to do is import two tracks into the same project, which you can do using the "Import Audio" command in the Project menu, or simply by dragging the two audio files to Audacity. When you press the record button, Audacity generates a new track automatically, also.
In order to save your mix, you can either Export the project, which will automatically mix all of your tracks together, or you can select your tracks and use the "Quick Mix" command in the Project menu.
2. Can I remove the vocals from a recording?
With some stereo recordings, it is possible to remove the vocals because of the way in which the recording was mixed at the studio. Often, the vocals are placed in the exact center of the recording, while all other instruments are slightly off−center. If you subtract the right channel from the left channel, the vocals get completely canceled out, leaving only the other instruments.
This only works on some recordings!
To attempt this in Audacity, import a stereo recording, then click on the track pop−up menu
(the little down−arrow next to the name of the track) and select "Split Stereo Track". Now select the lower track (the right channel) and use the "Invert" effect (from the Effect menu).
Finally, use the track pop−up menus to make both channels Mono channels, and then mix them together using Quick Mix. If you're lucky, the vocals will be gone.
3. When I try to record harmonies with myself, why are the two tracks out of sync?
This is normal and it happens because there is a small delay between when Audacity starts playing sound and when it actually reaches your speaker. Audacity does not automatically try to correct for this delay, and you must do it manually.
To correct this delay, use the Time Shift tool to slide one of the tracks over until they line up.
Note that you can use the tool while you are listening to the recording.
4. Why doesn't Audacity ship with an MP3 encoder?
Unfortunately, the algorithm to encode or create MP3 files is patented, and Audacity would not be able to include an MP3 exporting algorithm without either charging a fee or violating the law in many countries.
As a compromise, Audacity comes with the ability to use other MP3 encoders, which you must download separately. It is up to you to make sure you are in compliance with any licensing restrictions imposed by MP3 encoders.
For more information, see the page on Exporting MP3 files.
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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111−1307 USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software−−to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights.
We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
(2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.
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Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' reputations.
Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.
The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow.
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below, refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program" means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you".
Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
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You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
parties under the terms of this License.
c) If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
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Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective works based on the Program.
In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under the scope of this License.
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine−readable
source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
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customarily used for software interchange; or,
c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
received the program in object code or executable form with such
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The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable.
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If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object code.
4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance.
5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the
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License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty−free redistribution of the Program by
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If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances.
It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice.
This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License.
8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.
Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
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Foundation.
10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
NO WARRANTY
11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
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WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
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TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
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END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
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To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
Copyright (C) 19yy
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
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Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
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Audacity Manual Title Page
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.
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− A −
− D −
− G −
Index of Terms
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
− B −
− E −
− H −
− C −
− F −
− I −
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− J −
− M −
− P −
− S −
− K −
− N −
− Q −
− T −
− L −
− O −
− R −
− U −
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− V −
− Y −
− W −
− Z −
− X −
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Table of contents
- 1 Audacity Manual Title Page
- 2 Audacity Manual Contents
- 4 Introduction
- 7 Credits
- 8 Audacity History
- 11 Audacity - How to use this manual
- 12 Audacity Manual - Tutorials
- 13 Audacity Manual - Effects
- 14 Tutorial - Basics - Part 1 - Digital Audio
- 19 Tutorial - Basics - Part 2 - Rules of Audacity
- 21 Tutorial - Basics - Part 3 - Setup, Audio Import and Playback
- 26 Tutorial - Basics - Part 4 - Recording with Audacity
- 28 Editing for Beginners - Introduction
- 32 Editing for Beginners - Cut, Copy and Paste
- 37 Editing for Beginners - Silence, Duplicate and Split
- 40 Editing for Beginners - Splitting and Submixes
- 45 Tutorial - Common Editing Tasks - Part 1 - Quickies
- 47 Tutorial - Common Editing Tasks - Part 2 - Cleaning Vocal Tracks
- 50 Tutorial - Common Editing Tasks - Part 3 - Cutting up long Tracks
- 53 Effects for Beginners - 1 - Reverbs
- 57 Editing for Beginners - Introduction
- 60 Audacity Manual Contents
- 61 Menu Reference
- 62 File Menu
- 65 Edit Menu
- 68 View Menu
- 70 Project Menu
- 75 Generate Menu
- 77 Effect Menu
- 83 Analyze Menu
- 84 Preferences
- 90 File Formats
- 92 Export MP3/OGG
- 94 Toolbar Reference
- 95 Toolbar
- 98 Mixer Toolbar
- 100 Edit Toolbar
- 102 Menu & Screen Reference
- 103 Audio Tracks
- 105 Label Tracks
- 108 Note Tracks
- 109 Time Tracks
- 111 Track Delete Button
- 112 Vertical Track Resizing
- 113 Track Pop-Down Menu
- 115 Track Solo Button
- 116 Track Mute Button
- 117 Track Gain and Pan Controls
- 118 Keyboard Shortcut Reference
- 120 Keyboard Shortcut Customization
- 124 How do effects work in Audacity ?
- 125 Basic Calculus of Acoustics
- 127 Audio Effect - Reverb
- 133 Audio Effect - Delay
- 137 Audio Effect - Chorus
- 139 Audio effect - Compressor
- 140 Effects - Processors and Effects
- 141 FAQ
- 145 License
- 154 Glossary