Robert's suggestion of duplicating the track and applying the effect to
it is my preferred option in Audacity. Make sure that you leave a
little extra room at the end of the original track before copying.
Otherwise the reverb will cut off sharply at the end.
Andrew
On 2/12/2016 5:47 PM, Robert Hänggi wrote:
Hi Matt
My general recommendation for such effects like reverb, delay and so
on is to apply them to a duplicate of the original (Control+d).
The Audacity reverb has the check box "wet only" which should be
enabled. 3rd party effects have a similar control, e.g. mix or
dry/wet.
Don't forget to deactivate (deselect) the original before going on.
Once the reverb is applied, you can change it's gain or panning or
create fades according to your wishes.
Robert
2016-12-02 4:38 GMT+01:00, Matt Turner <meturner2214@xxxxxxxxx>:
Hi folks.The audacity4blind web site is at
In my project, i have a vocal part, that i want the reverb to start out
at a low volume.
Then, I'd like to gradually bring the reverb volume back up again.
Is there anyway to do this?
The audacity4blind web site is at
//www.freelists.org/webpage/audacity4blind
Subscribe and unsubscribe information, message archives,
Audacity keyboard commands, and more...
To unsubscribe from audacity4blind, send an email to
audacity4blind-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
with subject line
unsubscribe
//www.freelists.org/webpage/audacity4blind
Subscribe and unsubscribe information, message archives,
Audacity keyboard commands, and more...
To unsubscribe from audacity4blind, send an email to
audacity4blind-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
with subject line
unsubscribe