Lets say I'm applying a reverb or an echo in Adobe Audition, on an
entire track in multitrack view. But actually, I want only part of
the track to have that reverb, and then for it to taper off and
disappear, replaced by the echo afterwards. Any way to do this? I've
used envelopes for altering the volume, but maybe there's a way for
each effect in the mixer? I'm sorta new to this so any detail you can
provide would be great
Jason wrote
>Lets say I'm applying a reverb or an echo in Adobe Audition, on an
>entire track in multitrack view. But actually, I want only part of
>the track to have that reverb, and then for it to taper off and
>disappear, replaced by the echo afterwards. Any way to do this? I've
>used envelopes for altering the volume, but maybe there's a way for
>each effect in the mixer? I'm sorta new to this so any detail you can
>provide would be great >
Use an aux send and then use automation to control its output volume.
>
>Raymond wrote:
>
>> Use an aux send and then use automation to control its output volume.
>
Bob wrote
>Could you roughly outline how to do that in Audition?
Read the manual or (if not possible) buy some better software with automation.
The only other way I can think of would be to copy and paste the parts you want
to effect (if that's possible) into a new track and go from there.
>>Raymond wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Use an aux send and then use automation to control its output volume.
>>
> Bob wrote
>
>>Could you roughly outline how to do that in Audition?
>
>
> Read the manual or (if not possible) buy some better software with automation.
> The only other way I can think of would be to copy and paste the parts you want
> to effect (if that's possible) into a new track and go from there.
In other words, you don't know?
Bob
--
"Things should be described as simply as possible, but no
simpler."
"Raymond" <bruwhaha58097238@aol.com> wrote in message
news:20040820035509.14599.00002046@mb-m29.aol.com...
> >
> >Raymond wrote:
> >
> >> Use an aux send and then use automation to control its output volume.
> >
> Bob wrote
> >Could you roughly outline how to do that in Audition?
>
> Read the manual or (if not possible) buy some better software with
automation.
> The only other way I can think of would be to copy and paste the parts you
want
> to effect (if that's possible) into a new track and go from there.
Do you even use Audition, or were you just posting how you thought it SHOULD
work given that that's what you do with your software?
Place your track in the multitrack view, then click on the FX button
for that track and set the effects as desired (e.g. set it for dry 0%
and wet 100%).
Then, from the VIEW menu, select "Show Wet/Dry Mix Envelopes."
A kind of mustard-yellow line will appear at the top of the waveform
(the color may be different on your system, though). Because it's at
the top, the effect will be applied at 100%, so if you want the track
dry at the start, drag it down to the bottom, pulling it up toward the
end.
You can then adjust this envelope to change the wet/dry ratio
throughout the track, just the way you would adjust the volume
envelope.
Furthermore, you can right-click the waveform to pull up another menu.
At the bottom of this menu, from the Envelopes tab, you can even tell
Audition that you want to use spline curves on the FX Mix.
I hope this helps.
Richard
ash477@hotmail.com (jason) wrote in message news:<e3b3e2b5.0408190931.6f1d626a@posting.google.com>...
> Lets say I'm applying a reverb or an echo in Adobe Audition, on an
> entire track in multitrack view. But actually, I want only part of
> the track to have that reverb, and then for it to taper off and
> disappear, replaced by the echo afterwards. Any way to do this? I've
> used envelopes for altering the volume, but maybe there's a way for
> each effect in the mixer? I'm sorta new to this so any detail you can
> provide would be great >
> Jason Shohet
>
>"Raymond" <bruwhaha58097238@aol.com> wrote in message
>news:20040820035509.14599.00002046@mb-m29.aol.com...
>> >
>> >Raymond wrote:
>> >
>> >> Use an aux send and then use automation to control its output volume.
>> >
>> Bob wrote
>> >Could you roughly outline how to do that in Audition?
>>
>> Read the manual or (if not possible) buy some better software with
>automation.
>> The only other way I can think of would be to copy and paste the parts you
>want
>> to effect (if that's possible) into a new track and go from there.
Thomas wrote
>Do you even use Audition, or were you just posting how you thought it SHOULD
>work given that that's what you do with your software?
>
What do you want me to do? Come over to your house and hold your hand?
If your software is useles for what you want to do then you need better
software. THATS what I was saying!
hehe... Its easy to say "use automation". However in looking at
Audition Help, I don't see ANYTHING about doing automation, just
moving around envelopes.
BTW, I wouldn't mind using an envelop if that can be done, like it is
for volume. If I have an FX rack of Reverb, Echo & Parametric, can
each one have an envelope *line* that appears in the multritrack view.
If so, I could live with just moving around those lines to increase /
decrease an effect, although automation with a knob, fader would be
much better!
Richard wrote:
>
> Hi Jason--
>
> Place your track in the multitrack view, then click on the FX button
> for that track and set the effects as desired (e.g. set it for dry 0%
> and wet 100%).
>
> Then, from the VIEW menu, select "Show Wet/Dry Mix Envelopes."
>
> A kind of mustard-yellow line will appear at the top of the waveform
> (the color may be different on your system, though). Because it's at
> the top, the effect will be applied at 100%, so if you want the track
> dry at the start, drag it down to the bottom, pulling it up toward the
> end.
>
> You can then adjust this envelope to change the wet/dry ratio
> throughout the track, just the way you would adjust the volume
> envelope.
>
> Furthermore, you can right-click the waveform to pull up another menu.
> At the bottom of this menu, from the Envelopes tab, you can even tell
> Audition that you want to use spline curves on the FX Mix.
>
> I hope this helps.
>
> Richard
>
> ash477@hotmail.com (jason) wrote in message news:<e3b3e2b5.0408190931.6f1d626a@posting.google.com>...
> > Lets say I'm applying a reverb or an echo in Adobe Audition, on an
> > entire track in multitrack view. But actually, I want only part of
> > the track to have that reverb, and then for it to taper off and
> > disappear, replaced by the echo afterwards. Any way to do this? I've
> > used envelopes for altering the volume, but maybe there's a way for
> > each effect in the mixer? I'm sorta new to this so any detail you can
> > provide would be great > >
> > Jason Shohet
The only problem comes when you want to change the effect that you are
applying from echo to reverb. You will probably have to use another
track to do that and crossfade between the tracks. Audition's auto
crossfade seems to work well so don't waste time trying to crossfade
manually.
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