This guide is for those who want to be walked through the process step-by-step. It was developed by Ian M. Cook and Dumitrita Holdis.
- Audacity cannot yet apply effects in real-time while recording or while otherwise writing data to the project. Advanced users can apply effects to recordings in real-time by applying the effects in a VST host and routing the effect output to be recorded by Audacity.
- The Edit Menu provides standard edit commands (Undo, Redo, Cut, Copy, Paste and Delete) plus many other commands specific to editing audio or labels. There are many commands available from this menu so some commands are grouped into submenus. Click on the image to learn more Mac users: Ctrl = ⌘ and Alt = Option.
- Getting Started - Recording, Importing, Editing, Exporting. Audacity Tour Guide - quick tour of selected features of Audacity; Installing and updating Audacity on Windows, Mac or Linux. Updating from Audacity 2.x to Audacity 3.x (changed project structure) Installing plug-ins for Audacity on Windows, Mac or Linux; Changing language.
The Edit Menu provides standard edit commands (Undo, Redo, Cut, Copy, Paste and Delete) plus many other commands specific to editing audio or labels. There are many commands available from this menu so some commands are grouped into submenus. Click on the image to.
This guide is available as a .pdf
And below:
1. Import the audio you have previously recorded
- Use Track One for your main audio track (e.g. narration, interview, discussion)
- Place the audio material in sequence (e.g. intro narration, interview, outro). When you import multiple tracks, the audio will appear on different tracks. Move it so that all the audio is on one track.
- Leave an empty track underneath for editing
- You will add music, sound effects or secondary audio later in the editing process
2. (Re)listen to your material
3. If you have background hiss, computer noise or other wanted noise remove it
- Use the noise reduction tool
4. Delete unwanted material
- Delete any material that you will not use
- For now just concentrate on the large chunks that you don’t need, don’t worry about coughs or other minor noises that you want to fix.
5. Move everything into the right order
6. Go through the audio and fix all the unwanted noises
- Sometimes you will want to delete and close the gap, for example if there is a cough
- But sometimes you will not want to close the gap and yet still remove the noise, for instance if somebody breathes loudly. For such occasions copy a section of audio during which nobody is speaking (e.g. at the start of the recording) and paste it over the unwanted noise. This will preserve the natural pacing of speech.
7. Make the volume consistent throughout the podcast
- Normalise the levels, choosing -2.0 for your peak amplitude
- Amplify any areas that remain too quiet
8. HIGHLY OPTIONAL - Improve the audio quality
- Use the compressor tool to make parts sound louder, more ‘in your face’, softer or so on
- Use the equalisation tool to manipulate the frequencies, for instance if you want to make a voice less nasal or deeper
9. Add music or sound effects
- If you are using music/sound throughout the podcast, remember that there are two ways to paste, one that shifts everything else on the track and one that doesn’t.
- Now that you have material on two tracks you might need to move many things at once, pay attention to if you want material to move as one or independently
10. Export your finished podcast
This guide is for those who want to be walked through the process step-by-step. It was developed by Ian M. Cook and Dumitrita Holdis.
This guide is available as a .pdf
And below:
1. Import the audio you have previously recorded
- Use Track One for your main audio track (e.g. narration, interview, discussion)
- Place the audio material in sequence (e.g. intro narration, interview, outro). When you import multiple tracks, the audio will appear on different tracks. Move it so that all the audio is on one track.
- Leave an empty track underneath for editing
- You will add music, sound effects or secondary audio later in the editing process
2. (Re)listen to your material
3. If you have background hiss, computer noise or other wanted noise remove it
- Use the noise reduction tool
4. Delete unwanted material
- Delete any material that you will not use
- For now just concentrate on the large chunks that you don’t need, don’t worry about coughs or other minor noises that you want to fix.
5. Move everything into the right order
6. Go through the audio and fix all the unwanted noises
- Sometimes you will want to delete and close the gap, for example if there is a cough
- But sometimes you will not want to close the gap and yet still remove the noise, for instance if somebody breathes loudly. For such occasions copy a section of audio during which nobody is speaking (e.g. at the start of the recording) and paste it over the unwanted noise. This will preserve the natural pacing of speech.
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7. Make the volume consistent throughout the podcast
Audacity Editing App
- Normalise the levels, choosing -2.0 for your peak amplitude
- Amplify any areas that remain too quiet
8. HIGHLY OPTIONAL - Improve the audio quality
- Use the compressor tool to make parts sound louder, more ‘in your face’, softer or so on
- Use the equalisation tool to manipulate the frequencies, for instance if you want to make a voice less nasal or deeper
9. Add music or sound effects
- If you are using music/sound throughout the podcast, remember that there are two ways to paste, one that shifts everything else on the track and one that doesn’t.
- Now that you have material on two tracks you might need to move many things at once, pay attention to if you want material to move as one or independently
10. Export your finished podcast
Audacity Editing Online