Sams Teach Yourself Premiere 6.5 in 24 Hours
| Premiere's audio landscape improved with the release of version 6.5. Included in it is TCEssentials , a suite of three professional audio-sweetening tools from TCWorks, a German company. Those tools effectively replace 11 of Premiere 6.0's 20 audio effects, although Adobe still included them in Premiere 6.5. I'll take you through the TCWorks products in a few minutes. First, though, a few fundamentals:
There are seven categories (eight if you count DirectX, but it merely opens the TCWorks tab). If you're not an audio engineer, some of the termsBandpass, Channel, and EQmay be a bit obtuse. Here's a quick take on the categories: Bandpass These three effects remove specific audio frequencies. However, there's no reason I can think of to use them because the TCWorks TC EQ tool handles the features of all three Bandpass effects. Highpass removes low frequencies (it " passes " high frequencies through), Lowpass removes high frequencies, and the Notch/Hum Filter removes a specific, user -selected frequency. You can use Lowpass, for example, to create sound geared for a subwoofer or use Notch/Hum Filter to remove power-line noise (a narrow 60 Hz tone in the United States). Channel Five effects handle one very basic functionadjusting where you hear the signal (left, right, or somewhere in between). Auto Pan lets you automate sound going back and forth from the right channel to the left. You can use the timeline's audio track blue "pan" rubberband to do most of the channel functions as well.
DirectX Simply accesses the TCWorks effects. Dynamics Boost, Compressor, and Noise Gate all adjust volume characteristics. The TCWorks Dynamics filter replicates and refines these functions. EQ Equalization. TCWorks also tackles this section's three functions: Bass & Treble, Equalize, and Parametric Equalization. If you have an ounce of audiophile in you, you probably have an equalizer on some stereo equipment. Basically it lets you selectively change the volume for specific frequency ranges. Effect This may be Premiere's most enjoyable set of audio effects. I'll have you put them through their paces in a few minutes. Chorus adds one or more voices to a single voice (or instrument) by replicating the original sound at a slightly different frequency ("detuning" it). Do that a couple times and you have, well, a chorus. But it can sound kind of "warbly." Flanger creates a similar effect using a different technique. It inverts the phase of the audio signal at its center frequency. And Multi-Effect takes something close to the Chorus effect and constantly shifts the pitch of the added voice. Reverb & Delay The TCWorks Reverb tool smoothly handles most of the functions of these three effects. Echo is what you'd expecta direct repetition of your audio set for a specific delay. Reverb is like Echo but muffles the repeated and delayed sound to simulate an acoustic environment, such as a large room. TCWorks handles both functions better. Multitap Delay is the only Premiere audio effect in this section that TCWorks does not replicate. It lets you turn on up to four delayed audio "taps." I'll go over this in detail later. As an exercise, I'll suggest you experiment with this fun effect. TCWorks This set of three toolsDynamics, EQ, and Reverbtakes on virtually all the functions of the Premiere Dynamics, EQ, and Reverb & Delay audio effect sections. At first its interface, illustrated in Figure 10.5, is a bit daunting, but you'll come to enjoy its responsiveness and customizability . Figure 10.5. The TCWorks EQ interface. One of three TCWorks tools that at first may appear complicated but will end up improving your project's audio quality.
Task: Add an Audio Effect to a Clip
I'll save TCWorks for last and first go through the basics of how you add, preview, and layer multiple audio effects. Follow these steps to add an audio effect to a clip:
Task: Add Multiple Audio Effects to a Clip
You can add multiple audio (and video) effects to the same clip. Here's how:
The palette works on a first-come, first- served basis. If you click Setup in the Palette's top effect (in this case, Lowpass) and select Preview Sound, you will hear only the Lowpass effect. If you select Setup for the effect below Lowpass in the Effect Controls palette (in this case, Auto Pan), you'll hear the combined result of the two effectsand so on down the line. Each subsequent effect adds itself to those above it. To isolate just the Auto Pan effect, disable Lowpass by clicking (turning off) its little f icon. Now if you preview Auto Pan, you'll hear only that specific effect. To remove an effect from the palette, select it by clicking its name . Then click the wastebasket icon at the bottom of the palette (pressing the Delete key also will remove the clips from the timeline).
Generally there is no need to render audio effects on the timeline to hear them (see the following caution). Simply place your edit line on your clip and press the spacebar or the play button in the Program Monitor window to listen to your audio effect in real-time.
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