as I said I did the "books and beyond" show, entirely on SR and believe
me, there were on an average 5000 edits, mainly for such as umnmnmns,
hmmmm, you know, starts of phrases where a different phrase was wanted
or used, and then, length. The interviews were over an hour, sometimes
an hour and ten minutes, where the overall length had to be at the most
58 minutes and 30 seconds, including music and announcements.
Then, fade-in, fade outs, combining tracks where the music was in stereo
and the output was mono where you had to make the music fade down the
proper amount just before the announcer spoke. Even on the commercial
market, most so-called "book producers," do not fade the "background"
music enough so it drowns out the announcer where it should be a "bed"
to lie on, not a blanket to hide under. :)
-----
Curtis Delzer, HS.
K6VFO
San Bernardino, CA
On Fri, 26 Aug 2016 14:01:53 -0400
"Harry Brown" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "wd8oep2464" for
DMARC) wrote:
Hi all,
If anyone is unsure about what scrubbing does, just listen to any of Neal's
recordings, or, any of the eyes on success podcasts, as good as it gets!
What I love about SR is, with this scrubbing feature, you can do that fine
editing, make things sound professional.
I've used it where I wanted to get rid of breathing sounds, get rid of any
ums or uhs, get rid of people sliding their words together. Scrubbing takes
care of the words together problem. Last time I did some audio editing, words
were slid together, and I had to use scrubbing, to end 1 word, without taking
out the next word, and that, is just awesome!
Jamie used it as well, in his fabulus demonstration of SR, (fantastic demo,
Jamie!
Harry
On 8/25/2016 2:13 AM, Neal Ewers wrote:
If I have time in the next couple days, I'll do a short audio tutorial on
scrubbing. In this instance, hearing is believing. I'm not suggesting that
everyone needs to use it, but for those of us who do, it is a real life
saver.
Neal
Neal
-----Original Message-----
From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Neal Ewers
Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2016 1:10 AM
To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: scrubbing, from the Studio Recorder manual
Actually, It also works very well for editing music. I recorded a CD of a
quartet of voices a couple years ago. They couldn't get through more than
two measures at a time without blowing something. I have to say that No
one, including Neal can hear any of the edits in that CD, and some of the
cuts were extremely close. I could not have done it without scrubbing.
Neal
-----Original Message-----
From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Peter Torpey
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2016 7:28 PM
To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: scrubbing, from the Studio Recorder manual
I find the scrubbing feature to be extremely useful when editing spoken
word audio and trying to make fine edits. People often run together words
and it can be difficult to make a clean cut between words without this
scrubbing feature. This is another feature that is implemented
particularly well in SR so that people using a screen reader can make these
precise edits that might not be possible otherwise.
--Pete
-----Original Message-----
From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mary Emerson ;
(Redacted sender "maryemerson" for DMARC)
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2016 6:56 PM
To: Studio Recorder <studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [studiorecorder] scrubbing, from the Studio Recorder manual
Scrubbing
Scrubbing refers to a feature that makes it easy to perform detailed
editing jobs. Here is how it works:
When you use the scrub commands, Scrub Back (Ctrl+Left Arrow) to scrub
backward or Scrub Forward (Ctrl+Right Arrow) to scrub forward, Studio
Recorder moves you a very small distance in the direction of the scrub.
The program then plays a small portion of the document at the new position.
By default, the program also loops the playback as long as you hold down
the Control key. The amount of movement and the amount of time that the
program plays back from the new position are both adjustable.
To adjust these settings, specify the Scrub Move Time and the Scrub Play
Time options in the General tab of the Settings dialog in the Options menu.
The Loop Scrubs option in the Advanced tab controls whether or not scrub
segments are looped.
Pixel Scrubbing
In addition to the normal scrubbing functions, Studio Recorder supports
Pixel Scrubbing. Pixel scrubbing works in the Wave view when the transport
is stopped. When you use the Left and Right arrow keys, the program plays
the sound represented by the pixel under the caret. The distance moved and
the amount played is controlled by the Zoom In and Zoom Out commands, so
the further you zoom out, the more you move and the more you hear.
There is a menu item in the Options menu which controls whether the playing
of pixels is looped. If this item is checked, pixels are looped until
another transport function (such as stop) is used.
The looping feature is automatically disabled if you zoom in far enough
that the sound that would be played would be short enough or at a high
enough frequency to be meaningless. This is done in an attempt to avoid
very high frequency signals from being generated while looping. High
frequency signals could damage hearing or equipment.