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Adding Sound Effects While Recording A Voiceover

Music: How can I add music to video clips I've recorded with my iPhone 6?

Yeah, you can easily add music in your video which you have recorded with your iPhone 6 all you have to do is to install an app called kinemaster or you can use default video editor in iPhones which is iMovie app.If you download kinemaster to add music in your video please check out the tutorial given below on how to add music in your videos.If you don't understand the language of the video please enable subtitles.If the answer helps you please UPVOTE IT and don't forget to FOLLOW ME from your answer like this one.

How do I record my voice on karaoke tracks?

First select a good quality karaoke. Next open a DAW, eg Audacity, Cubase, Adobe Audition etc. Next open the karaoke, and change the pitch, (semitone) until you find it comfortable to sing with. Next Sing and record in mono file. Then follow a simple touch, if you are using adobe audition….NOICE REDUCTION >> DECLIPP >> PARAMETRIC EQ (loundness) >> NORMALISE ( 95.8) >> DYNAMIC EQ >> NORMALISE. Next convert in stereo. Add suitable analog delay, to add space effect. Next add a reverb. Match the volume, of voice over & karaoke. All done, export to mp3

What is the best way to record high quality voice over using audacity?

You can prioritise according to the availability of resources :1. DAW2. Sound Card and connecting cables3. Microphone (Condenser)4. Pop Filter5. Acoustic Shields6. Headphones

How do I record my voice over a beat into FL studio?

Click & drag the beat into the playlist.Open the mixer & choose any insert you like (other than master).Above where the effects slots are, there’s a box. Click it & choose your input device. Make sure it’s enabled through asio or whatever audio driver you use (I use my behringer usb audio for my in’s & out’s, much less latency) individual input/output devices can be enabled/disabled in the options->audio settings menu by clicking “show asio panel”In slot 1 of your mixer insert, choose Edison.Never route your input through effects & then into Edison. I.E. having eq, compressor, ETC before Edison in the mixer insert you’ve chosen as your input. I always use the mixer channel routing to add effects to a totally different (usually the next) mixer insert by right clicking (with the input insert selected) the triangle at the bottom of the next insert & choosing “route to this track only”, & do all my effects on that insert. You can do this as many times as you want.Also, after i’m Satisfied with the recorded audio, in Edison I click the wrench, & then choose “send to playlist as audio clip” or shift+cMake sure to route that audio clip to the appropriate mixer insert.Then you can record something else there & lather, rinse & repeat!Good luck!

Recording Software. Bandicam for Gameplay and Audacity for Audio Commentary.?

Okay so I'm using Bandicam and Audacity for my recordings. They both work really well together as the trick i'm using works with both Fraps AND Bandicam with keeping your Audacity audio in sync at the same rate as your gameplay video footage. But the problem I'm having is actually putting my Audacity file and my Bandicam file together. VideoPad was my video editor and it doesn't work for me for some reason, it glitches and keeps putting my video in upside down, I rotate and get it fixed but then it won't allow me to save the rotated video version. So I scraped that and I don't really like Adobe premiere because I can only afford the trial version right now and the Trial version slaps on Watermarks all over my video. Is there a good video editor that is ridiculously easy to use without much complications? I've been told Sony Vegas is good but I keep getting errors when trying to download it.

How do I delete the original audio while recording a video shoot and then add the audio later on?

There’s several programs you could use to do that. I mainly use Final Cut Pro, which is probably overkill and more than you need to spend; I also use Logic Pro, ScreenFlow, Motion, and After Effects, all of which could do that easily. There are also probably several cheaper options, but since it’s part of what I do for a living, I’ve already got these tools. Of those, the cheapest is probably Motion, which I believe was $50. It’s Mac only, so if you’re on PC, that won’t help. But basically, in any of those programs, you open the video file, and you’d see the video and audio on separate lines (tracks). You can turn the audio all the way down (or delete it entirely), and there will be an option in one of the menus to record a new voiceover. Then export and you’re done. Bear in mind, most software will not change the original file, but will create a new video file with the new audio, so you’ll still have the original audio. I don’t use Audacity, so I’m not sure if you can do it in there. If you want to find out, I’d say Google something like “making a voiceover in audacity”

Which comes first, the voice actors or the computer animation? How do the voice actors and the animation team work together?

What Aniket said is pretty much the standard process the world over. Here's a few notes from the point of view of an animator/director...If there's any sort of lip-synch and you want to do a good job then it's vital that the audio is recorded first. The animator can then scrub through the audio one frame at a time and hear exactly what mouth shape is needed.However, that's not to say that there aren't any visuals up to that point. Quite the opposite. A script is written and a storyboard is drawn. Somebody (perhaps the director and writer) may do a rough recording of the dialogue and the storyboard sketches are then put to the sound. This is called an animatic. Although it's hardly animated it's a great way to see if the story is clear and flowing and what bits might need changing - and of course it's very easy to change at this point.There then follows a circle of rewriting, refining, chopping and adding until everyone is happy the animatic is as good as can be. At that point you can hire the expensive actors for sound recording sessions. They're given a script but they're often allowed - or encouraged - to do a certain amount of ad-libbing. Given freedom to experiment actors can bring a whole new side to a character that you perhaps hadn't even thought of.The new audio is then dropped back on to the animatic - which is adapted if necessary. Finally the scenes can be split up and the audio can be handed to the animators along with any directions. Animators are actors too so it's important to allow them the freedom to bring something to the character as well. Once the animation is done don't suggest to the animator or the director that you might change the audio - they'll either get really cross or upset or say impolite things about you when you've left the room. If you really need to change it, do the decent thing and get the animation changed too.There are some sounds that are usually added after the animation and those are the sound effects and music tracks. Hope that helps.

How do I separate a voice-over from the background music?

A: Separate and keep the voiceover as a separate track or B: remove the voiceover and keep the background music?.
A: only possible if you have the original recordings on separate tracks.
B: There is a method but it's usually not very successful. It depends on how the track was mixed.
If the music is in stereo and the voiceover is exactly in the center of the mix limited success may be achieved.
Audacity is a free audio recording / editing program which can remove center panned vocals.
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Lame if needed to encode to mp3:
http://lame.sourceforge.net/
How to install Lame:
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/help/faq...
Basic tutorials:
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/manual-1.2/tutorials.html
http://www.recipester.org/Software/Audacity

Method. Try version 1.3.12 first. The vocal removal is a function rather than a manual method.

This is possible only for certain stereo tracks. When the vocals are exactly the same on both stereo channels, you can remove them by “subtracting” one channel from the other. This works for many studio recordings, where the vocal track is mixed exactly in the center. Be aware that bass and drums are usually panned to the center and can be removed or reduced also. Depending on how the track was mixed the vocal may only be reduced, not fully removed.

To do this in Audacity 1.2:

1. Import your stereo file into Audacity.
2. Open the track menu (click the arrow next to the track title), and choose “Split Stereo Track.”
3. Select the lower track (the right channel) by clicking it in the area around the mute/solo buttons.
4. Choose “Invert” from the Effects menu.
5. Using the track menus, change each track to “Mono.”

Press the Play button to hear the results. If you are lucky, the voice will be gone but most of the other instruments will be unaffected, just like a karaoke track. You can use the Export commands in the File menu to save the results.

Audacity 1.3.12:
Has a vocal remover built in. Just select the whole track then vocal remover from the effect menu.

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