Man, you are really good. Thanks for your videos. You had me at "you may be wandering, do you have to all these these things to make your audio better? The answer is YES". Kudos for being honest. Thank you again.
Thank you! So helpful. I really appreciate your explanation of what each of the settings do--not something everyone explains and it matters since our audio will likely differ from yours. Keep up the great work!
Thank for improving the voice-over the right way. Most tutorials suggested "Bass Boost". Please make Tutorial on how the same process can be done in Davinci Resolve(free) Fairlight page.
Thankyou for this video,Its very helpful but why you didn't use Bass boost,and instead of using filter eq for treble boost,can i use Bass and Treble option in effects? Will the result be the same? I am currently using treble boost 6 dB and bass boost to 3 dB. Pls reply.
Bass boost boosts below 100 Hz but human voice starts from at least 80 Hz. So no point of boosting below 80hz, even that can increase low frequency noise. If you want to add some bass to your voice, you should make a custom EQ which boost from 80 to 200 or 300 Hz.
It depends on where you are going to use the audio. I do not think there is a universal rule on the LUFs level. But I would be interested to know the reference you mentioned.
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j Generally accepted numbers can not be a rule. For example, when you are editing audio for a TV program, your LUFS level will be quite different. If you are submitting to Spotify or producing audiobooks, you have to follow their guidelines.
@@MasterEditor5 yes obviously i agree, but these are close to numbers, for Spotify it is -14 lufs and for audiobooks it could be between -21 to -18 lufs
You state at 10:35 if you change gain on left you move it back for output- why? What if normalize makes it too loud but moving gain on left side to -1dB . So when output to mp3it will not output with the reduced gain ?
One of the issue of gain slider is the changes do not reflect on waveform on realtime. If you adjust gain slider and export audio and open that audio, you will see waveform changed. If the gain slider change is the last adjustment on your audio then it's fine. Otherwise gain slider should be used when you need to hear something louder and should be in 0 before normalizing.
@@MasterEditor5 oh now I understand it's not really for editing the actual track. I don't know why they put that there then. What would be the purpose if it's not altering the final output. So if I'm correct you go into the amplified menu and reduce the volume there.
@@Thatsmessedupman amplify is for altering small part of the track. For whole track, you should use normalize. If -1 db is too loud, you can use -5 or -6
Bro you are applying compression in a wrong way, you are setting the threshold on low rms peaks which is wrong, you have to set the threshold limit on high rms peaks and also check the make up gain box, this will compress the high rms peaks and also boost up the low ones according and the audio will be balanced accordingly. Because it the the high peaks which needs to be compressed and low ones should not be compressed as it doesn't need compression, it is already low. It just needs a gain to be audible and so the make up gain option. Try to understand the logic properly bro, i appreciate your videos, but this compression thing is not right.
Make up gain box compress nothing. It increases the gain after the compression is done. Low volumes are never compressed. You either decrease the louder ones which is downward compression or increase quieter sounds which is upward compression. I suggest you go through this to get the nitty gritty details: manual.audacityteam.org/man/compressor.html
@@MasterEditor5 yes true! That's what i was trying to explain that makeup gain is to amplify the audio after compression, downward compression does not affect the lower rms peaks, but in this video first you found the dB of lower peaks and then you have put the threshold below it which is wrong, it will decrease the lower peaks also this way along with higher rms peaks. Also understand that RMS is the lighter blue part in the middle of the audio waveform, so when we talk about downward compression along with the makeup gain box checked, we are talking about RMS compression.
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j I admit the peak value based on the lowest peak was a bit aggressive compression. But the idea of downward compression reflected in this video.
@@MasterEditor5 yes true idea of download compression was rightly explained, just a tad correction would do. I really appreciate your videos on audacity bro ❤️ i figured out that you got a proper understanding of audio editing tools and your explanation is also detailed, upto the mark and also correct. People like you are genuine creators 👏. You have properly followed the audacity manuals. Btw do you have any idea for mobile recording? Like rec forge 2 is dead, it's of no use and the default phone recorder doesn't support external mic.
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j Unfortunately I have no experience with mobile recording. I appreciate your effort in watching my videos and expressing your thoughts in detail. Your feedback on these videos will help me to make better videos in the upcoming days.
Please like, it helps :-)
this is the only real learning video, thank you boss
Thanks for your inspiring comments on my videos.
Man, you are really good. Thanks for your videos. You had me at "you may be wandering, do you have to all these these things to make your audio better? The answer is YES". Kudos for being honest. Thank you again.
Welcome :-)
Thank you! So helpful. I really appreciate your explanation of what each of the settings do--not something everyone explains and it matters since our audio will likely differ from yours. Keep up the great work!
You are welcome :-)
Thank for improving the voice-over the right way. Most tutorials suggested "Bass Boost". Please make Tutorial on how the same process can be done in Davinci Resolve(free) Fairlight page.
Welcome. I will do that soon, maybe in 2 weeks from now.
Awesome sir your all video is helpful ❤️❤️❤️
Bro.Your videos are awesome...Please ..Make a video on Recforge II audio recorder. From settings to till process of recording.
This is the best Video on Audacity!!! Thank you!
You're very welcome! Comment like yours keep me motivated :-)
Thankyou for this video,Its very helpful but why you didn't use Bass boost,and instead of using filter eq for treble boost,can i use Bass and Treble option in effects? Will the result be the same? I am currently using treble boost 6 dB and bass boost to 3 dB. Pls reply.
Bass boost boosts below 100 Hz but human voice starts from at least 80 Hz. So no point of boosting below 80hz, even that can increase low frequency noise. If you want to add some bass to your voice, you should make a custom EQ which boost from 80 to 200 or 300 Hz.
@@MasterEditor5 Thankyou I understand now.
For mono audios the LUFS should be -19 and for stereo -16
It depends on where you are going to use the audio. I do not think there is a universal rule on the LUFs level. But I would be interested to know the reference you mentioned.
@@MasterEditor5 yes they are generally accepted numbers 😊
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j Generally accepted numbers can not be a rule. For example, when you are editing audio for a TV program, your LUFS level will be quite different. If you are submitting to Spotify or producing audiobooks, you have to follow their guidelines.
@@MasterEditor5 yes obviously i agree, but these are close to numbers, for Spotify it is -14 lufs and for audiobooks it could be between -21 to -18 lufs
Very Useful........
Thanks :-)
You state at 10:35 if you change gain on left you move it back for output- why? What if normalize makes it too loud but moving gain on left side to -1dB . So when output to mp3it will not output with the reduced gain ?
One of the issue of gain slider is the changes do not reflect on waveform on realtime. If you adjust gain slider and export audio and open that audio, you will see waveform changed. If the gain slider change is the last adjustment on your audio then it's fine. Otherwise gain slider should be used when you need to hear something louder and should be in 0 before normalizing.
@@MasterEditor5 oh now I understand it's not really for editing the actual track. I don't know why they put that there then. What would be the purpose if it's not altering the final output.
So if I'm correct you go into the amplified menu and reduce the volume there.
@@Thatsmessedupman amplify is for altering small part of the track. For whole track, you should use normalize. If -1 db is too loud, you can use -5 or -6
Bro you are applying compression in a wrong way, you are setting the threshold on low rms peaks which is wrong, you have to set the threshold limit on high rms peaks and also check the make up gain box, this will compress the high rms peaks and also boost up the low ones according and the audio will be balanced accordingly. Because it the the high peaks which needs to be compressed and low ones should not be compressed as it doesn't need compression, it is already low. It just needs a gain to be audible and so the make up gain option. Try to understand the logic properly bro, i appreciate your videos, but this compression thing is not right.
Make up gain box compress nothing. It increases the gain after the compression is done. Low volumes are never compressed. You either decrease the louder ones which is downward compression or increase quieter sounds which is upward compression. I suggest you go through this to get the nitty gritty details: manual.audacityteam.org/man/compressor.html
@@MasterEditor5 yes true! That's what i was trying to explain that makeup gain is to amplify the audio after compression, downward compression does not affect the lower rms peaks, but in this video first you found the dB of lower peaks and then you have put the threshold below it which is wrong, it will decrease the lower peaks also this way along with higher rms peaks. Also understand that RMS is the lighter blue part in the middle of the audio waveform, so when we talk about downward compression along with the makeup gain box checked, we are talking about RMS compression.
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j I admit the peak value based on the lowest peak was a bit aggressive compression. But the idea of downward compression reflected in this video.
@@MasterEditor5 yes true idea of download compression was rightly explained, just a tad correction would do. I really appreciate your videos on audacity bro ❤️ i figured out that you got a proper understanding of audio editing tools and your explanation is also detailed, upto the mark and also correct. People like you are genuine creators 👏. You have properly followed the audacity manuals. Btw do you have any idea for mobile recording? Like rec forge 2 is dead, it's of no use and the default phone recorder doesn't support external mic.
@@user-xu9ji3kr3j Unfortunately I have no experience with mobile recording. I appreciate your effort in watching my videos and expressing your thoughts in detail. Your feedback on these videos will help me to make better videos in the upcoming days.