![]() You typically will want your audio to be staying a little below the zero mark. When working with your audio in Premiere Pro, you’re going to want make sure your levels are high enough (or not too high!) by checking out the dB meter to the right of the timeline. We’ll cover getting rid of background noise and background hum with the DeNoiser (and a touch of Lowpass or Highpass if needed,) we’ll level out our audio with Premiere Pro’s “Normalize Peaks” function, we’ll compress the audio with the Multiband compressor to start achieving that real “professional” sound, we’ll take a quick peek at mastering an audio track in Premiere Pro, and we’ll bundle it all up into a nice preset so you can apply your perfect audio preset to your audio tracks every time! If you like audio, I think you’ll like this video. Sound may be invisible, but it is an essential part of creating a rich, textured oral environment that tells the viewer how to feel.In this Premiere Pro tutorial, I want to walk you through how I clean up and take raw audio from a microphone and make it sound much better. Spending the time to do this right will greatly affect your viewer's experience. On the other hand, if the video quality is superior but the audio isn't up to snuff, the viewing experience is often quite negative. Studies have shown that if sound is clean, clear, and mixed correctly, the viewing experience can still be very positive even if the image quality is flawed. This means that you need to ensure that the primary audio elements are dominant, and that the supplementary audio elements blend into the background. Once these choices are made, it's important to mix the audio correctly adjusting the volume and clarity of each, so that every layered element works well with one another. (phone snaps) It's through the careful layering of these elements voice, sound effects, music, and silence that you're able to create powerful worlds defined by sound. ![]() When an editor chooses to use silence, they can direct the viewer's attention or focus on a particular character or plot point, or signal that something important just happened, or is about to happen. (enchanted orchestral music) (soft piano music) (ominous music) I also want to mention silence. It's interesting to see the same scene juxtaposed with different music tracks, because it really can create very different stylistic outcomes. Music can also provide information about things like character subtext, setting, culture, and more. And these can have a dramatic effect on the feeling of a scene. Music is made up of many unique characteristics such as tone, pacing, rhythm, and instrumentation. Music by nature is highly emotional and is one of the easiest ways to set a film's mood. Yeah, but you know, I really should go, I just. But if those sounds are missing and all we hear is the conversation. The audience will likely focus on their conversation, not the sounds of the crowd, the clinking the coffee cups, (cups clinking) footsteps or the traffic outside. Imagine a scene where two people are talking in a crowded coffee shop. Sound effects are nearly always used to compliment or enhance the viewing experience and not call attention to themselves, but we'll certainly know something is wrong if they're absent. (machines humming) Each setting is very unique, and creates different oral styles and tones. Creating the soundscape for a busy city street (horns honking) is very different from a beach, (beach waves swooshing) or a jungle, (birds chirping) or a futuristic space environment. Sound effects help to define setting and mood. ![]() These verbal elements inform much of the content and context for the storyline. The human voice most often includes onscreen dialogue or voiceover narration. In video editing, there are three main types of audio, voice, sound effects, and music. Whether the emotional response stems from happiness, fear, sadness, trepidation, bravery, or compassion, what we feel is largely informed by the sound. Sound has the ability to evoke more emotion than picture, reaching into viewers' subconscious to affect parts of the brain that viewing images can't. But believe it or not, audio is often even more important than video. It's through the art of video editing that you create those dynamic, cinematic experiences.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |