Right, you would want to use the auto duck effect for where your voice Duks
down the audio track and then your voice goes over the end of that audio track
and you will fade out the last few seconds to silence or rather only your
voice. This is tricky to describe but easy to do. Give me a phone call later
today at the phone number below and I will talk you through it.
Ted Galanos
www.GalanosConsulting.com
713-396-3495
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On Aug 3, 2020, at 9:05 AM, Justin Trevino <jtrevino@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Sarah, audacity has an effect called "Auto Duck." Be sure that your spoken
track is the track below the intro music in the track table. Select only the
music track and apply the "auto duck" effect. Audacity will pull the music
down for the duration of the spoken part.
On 8/3/2020 8:56 AM, Sarah Stephenson-Hunter wrote:
Hi All,
Yes this is another novice question!!
I’m quite pleased with msyelf that I’ve done the first short trailer episode
for my new podcast and it’s now on Spotify, Apple podcasts etc!! The
editing isn’t perfect but actually those who’ve listened to it don’t seem to
have noticed too much!!
Anyway one thing I would like to be able to do to imrpove future episodes is
to be able to fade the intro music down so I can speak over the alst few
seconds of it with my spoken intro but I can’t work out the best way to do
this – any suggestions / advice?
I’ve tried using the fade in the effects menu of Audacity but this didn’t do
what I wanted.
All help greatfully received!
With best wishes,
Sarah
Virus-free. www.avg.com