Power In American Society - Audacity
Getting Started
- Prepare a project folder labeled with your name and gather all source audio files in this location.
- Launch Audacity from the applications folder, or the doc.
Create an Audacity Project
- File > Save Project
- Label the project with your name and choose to save into your project folder.
Note: Audacity project files can only be viewed in Audacity and will not open in other applications.
Importing audio
File > Import > Audio navigate to the audio files that you want to import from your project folder.
- In the warning dialogue, choose the "safer" option to copy files.
This folder will contain all your audio files and edit information so you can continue to work on different computers so keep this folder and it's information contained.
- Save Often! preferably after every edit.
Tools
Transport Toolbar - controls playback and recording
Tools Toolbar
- Selection or "I-beam" tool
- Volume adjustment or envelope tool
- Zooming
- Time-shifting - move audio waveforms horizontally within your project
- Multi-function tool
Meter Toolbar - displays levels for playback and recording
Mixer Toolbar - controls the mixer settings of the sound card
Transcription Toolbar - plays audio at a slower or faster speed, affecting the pitch
Edit Toolbar - cut, copy, paste, trim, silence, undo, redo, sync-lock, zoom
Tracks
Tracks > Add new > Audio track, Stereo track, Label track, or Time track
Mono track
-Single audio file recorded with one microphone
Stereo track
-Single audio file with a left and right track recorded with a stereo microphone
Label track
-Add markers or regional markers to the whole project or individual tracks
Track Control Panel:
- Rename the track
- Provides sample information
- Mute or solo the track,
- Increase volume for the track
- Pan left-right function
- Split Stereo Track to separate a stereo file to two mono tracks to edit each channel separately
- Rejoin channels by selecting the two mono tracks and select > make stereo track
Tips for organizing your project
- Keep a copy of the original tracks.
- Use label tracks to identify portions and make notes (great for working in a group).
- Copy portions from the original audio track and paste into a new track to only keep the portions you want.
- Mute any audio tracks that you will not use to omit it from the final exported version.
Editing
Listen to your project hit the spacebar on your keyboard to Stop or Play
Label tracks and take notes of your project Listen to your audio and make labels.
Go to Tracks > Add New > Label Tracks
Zooming In/Out helps you make accurate selections of your waveform.
Highlight a portion of audio using your Selection Tool
Tracks > Add Label at Selection
Name your label.
Use Tab on your keyboard to select forwards to the next label, and SHIFT+Tab to select backwards to the previous label.
Editing Audio
Open a blank track - this will be your working pallet. Tracks > Mono track or Stereo Track
Choose the Selection tool in the Tools Toolbar.
Highlight your audio then Edit menu > copy
Select a point in your empty track then Edit menu > paste
File > Save Project
Effects
Noise Removal
Removes unwanted background noise.
Normalize
Increases the overall volume of your waveform equally.
Envelope
Let's you control a tracks volume changes smoothly over time.
Select the envelope tool. Click a beginning, end, and middle point on your audio waveform. Click and hold on a point to increase or decrease the volume.
Exporting
- Mute all the tracks you don't want to be apart of the final mix
- File > Export - exports the entire project except muted tracks
- or File > Export Selection - exports only selected portion of your project
- Name your project accordingly, last name of interviewee_final.wav, (Lori Blewett = blewett_final.wav) When exporting your final mix, name the file with "mix" so you can easily differentiate it from other source audio files.
- Choose and Audio File Format
- Select .wav for a high quality uncompressed file but bigger file size.