Sound Editing Question
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Sound Editing Question
I am wanting to delete portions of a soundtrack. I am wanting to use the first few words and then the last few words of the song and delete everything in between. I want to see the soundtrack play, stop it at the place I want to delete it, delete it and then resume. Is this possible? I saw how to split the track but the music wasn't playing so I'm not sure exactly where I want to split it until I hear it playing. Should I get an outside sound editor?
Thanks,
Kaye
Thanks,
Kaye
Paint Shop Pro X7, Canon 70D, Panasonic DMCTZ5
Re: Sound Editing Question
Hello
You better use Audacity, which is free
You have thhe possibility to stop playing, note the exact place, then select the part you want to delete and then use Edition, REmove audio and labels, Cut and join (my version is french then it's not exactly the terms)
You better use Audacity, which is free
You have thhe possibility to stop playing, note the exact place, then select the part you want to delete and then use Edition, REmove audio and labels, Cut and join (my version is french then it's not exactly the terms)
Chris Marie
Re: Sound Editing Question
Thank you Marie. I will download Audacity.
Kaye
Kaye
Paint Shop Pro X7, Canon 70D, Panasonic DMCTZ5
- Dean Athans
- Posts: 204
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 5:55 pm
- Location: Southern California
Re: Sound Editing Question
Kaye -
While Chris' method is the most elegant, note that you can accomplish the same thing strictly in PSP:
1. In the "Timeline" view of PSP, place--drag--the original piece wherever you want it to start.
2. Make several copies of that original, placing them, end-to-end, after the original.
3. Play and move the ending point of the original segment to the first point you want to break that selection.
4. In the 1st copy of the piece, move the starting point--from the beginning of the piece to the place where you want to start the next "word".
5. Next, grab the (now shortened) 1st copy, and slide it to abut the end of the (shortened) original segment.
6. Move the ending point of the first copy to the desired place, slide the starting point of the next (second) copy to the appropriate place, and slide that segment to abut the 1st copy.
I know it sounds confusing, but actually you're just taking a song, making several copies of it, cutting those copies to produce just the short sound segments you need, and then placing them end-to-end to create your finished piece.
The shortcoming of this method with respect to what Audacity can do, is that they do not remain together if you have to slide one or more segments earlier/later in your show. This would require you to adjust ("realign") all of them. Audacity, as Chris points out, would allow you to actually make a single, edited selection. But, at least the all-PSP method is a quick, easily usable tool. Oh yes, and all the segments are fully recoverable (i.e., the entire song is still available for every segment) if you later change your mind.
- Dean A.
While Chris' method is the most elegant, note that you can accomplish the same thing strictly in PSP:
1. In the "Timeline" view of PSP, place--drag--the original piece wherever you want it to start.
2. Make several copies of that original, placing them, end-to-end, after the original.
3. Play and move the ending point of the original segment to the first point you want to break that selection.
4. In the 1st copy of the piece, move the starting point--from the beginning of the piece to the place where you want to start the next "word".
5. Next, grab the (now shortened) 1st copy, and slide it to abut the end of the (shortened) original segment.
6. Move the ending point of the first copy to the desired place, slide the starting point of the next (second) copy to the appropriate place, and slide that segment to abut the 1st copy.
I know it sounds confusing, but actually you're just taking a song, making several copies of it, cutting those copies to produce just the short sound segments you need, and then placing them end-to-end to create your finished piece.
The shortcoming of this method with respect to what Audacity can do, is that they do not remain together if you have to slide one or more segments earlier/later in your show. This would require you to adjust ("realign") all of them. Audacity, as Chris points out, would allow you to actually make a single, edited selection. But, at least the all-PSP method is a quick, easily usable tool. Oh yes, and all the segments are fully recoverable (i.e., the entire song is still available for every segment) if you later change your mind.
- Dean A.
Dean A
Re: Sound Editing Question
Thank you Dean. How do you know where to stop the audio if it's not playing? When I hit play, it would play the slideshow with the music but it didn't show the soundwave so I would know where to stop the music.
Paint Shop Pro X7, Canon 70D, Panasonic DMCTZ5
- Dean Athans
- Posts: 204
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 5:55 pm
- Location: Southern California
Re: Sound Editing Question
Kaye -
That's the benefit of PSP's "Timeline View"
It DOES show the waveform, including both waveforms overlaid if that's how you have arranged them.
That's the benefit of PSP's "Timeline View"
It DOES show the waveform, including both waveforms overlaid if that's how you have arranged them.
Dean A
- Dean Athans
- Posts: 204
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 5:55 pm
- Location: Southern California
Re: Sound Editing Question
Forgot to add that you can play that portion of the show and watch how that splice sounds as it passes the cursor.
Dean A
Re: Sound Editing Question
Hi
Dean forgot to say that you have to play the show not in full screen
Dean forgot to say that you have to play the show not in full screen
Chris Marie
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