![]() ![]() You may not have paid attention to it as you were watching, but sometimes a Youtube performer will loudly clap at the beginning of a video. Unless you spent eye-watering amounts of money on the recorders, they will almost certainly drift apart over time. If I wanted to have two usb mics, any suggestion on what program to use?Īs up the message thread, you plug the second USB microphone into the second computer…īut even that has problems. fortunately I did back up the interview with my IPAD it sounds better than the two mics for sure. I was wondering why my voice was exceptionally louder…argh. Edit them together.Īll of these solutions take a senior, experienced editor. Which is the loud voice, you or the guest? If it’s the guest, you can type out the words and re-record your voice in a good, quiet, echo-free room. You can slide the timeline sideways with Shift+Scroll or Shift+Touchpad Scrollĭepending on the length of the interview, yes, that’s a career move.Īny chance you can do the interview again? Select the quiet voice and jump over the loud voice. Magnify the performance (sideways) with the zoom tools and carefully drag-select the quiet voice and boost it with Effect > Amplify or any of the other volume tools. ![]() Use a special filename different from anything else. File > Save Project > Save Backup Project. While the show is open, make a protection copy. If it was an interview where you asked a question and then sat patiently for the answer, then there’s hope. Audacity can’t split a mixed performance into individual voices. Or is this what the actual problem is? It only ever recorded one microphone and the quiet voice is someone speaking into “the back” of the one working mic.ĭid you ever interrupt each other or talk at the same time or talk over each other? If you did, you’re dead. How did you get Audacity to recognize two different microphones? It usually doesn’t like doing that very much. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |