Multiple tracks showing up when trying to edit
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2016 11:34 pm
I'm a previously published author whose works appeared in print in the last century and have now uploaded them on Amazon as e-book kindles. I downloaded audacity to help me record audio books. I used to be a voiceover artist whose work appeared all the time on Discover, history, The Learning Channel etc.But I'm a complete idiot when it comes to trying to understand the techniques of making it work – broadcast engineering – the guy up in the control room editing out all the coughs, pauses and glitches. The guys I've worked with in the past are very fast workers, almost like somebody playing a piano and taking a crappy reading and turning it into a masterpiece in the space of a half an hour or less. I wrote a show about theatrical dueling that Jose Ferrer narrated That was so full of coughing and pauses that I thought the tape would be ruined. The engineer made it perfect in less than half an hour After Ferrer left the studio.
But here I am now, a newbie into this arcane world with Audacity as my interface. I have been struggling with these tutorials and have managed to get a few tracks that I really loved, and one that I really liked using the "change pitch" effect to lower my voice. I was able to monkey around with it so that it actually sounds natural instead of some kind of science fiction vocal effect. I saved it of course, later intending to mix it with some music that I bought the rights for. In editing that vocal track, I got it right the first time completely by accident, selecting a section for redoing. I just deleted it, because there was background noise in it. I redid it and for some reason it worked just fine. It put it right back in that same track.
Subsequent trials didn't work so well. Part of my problem is that all of this – to my understanding – is pure metaphysics written in Sanskrit. So I'm feeling my way by trial and error, much as a chimp would. The next time I tried that, selecting and deleting, the cursor jumps down into a new track, with a completely new wave form. And keeps doing that for every edit thereafter. The instructions say that one is supposed to be able to undo whatever it is you been doing right from the get-go, and wouldn't you know I wound up deleting the whole damn file unintentionally, so now I have to start from scratch and hope I don't mess it up again.
It would help me immensely if I could keep the two tracks in front of me on the screen without new ones constantly coming down and crowding out the ones that working. For some reason the waveforms keep disappearing also and it takes considerable monkeying around to get them back – in the same condition as I lost them. How do I keep all these new tracks from crowding in and banishing my 2 main tracks completely from sight?
When I first opened the manual,, I thought "Hey this is great! It's like 'Audacity for Dummies'!" But what I need is "Audacity for Idiots.
But here I am now, a newbie into this arcane world with Audacity as my interface. I have been struggling with these tutorials and have managed to get a few tracks that I really loved, and one that I really liked using the "change pitch" effect to lower my voice. I was able to monkey around with it so that it actually sounds natural instead of some kind of science fiction vocal effect. I saved it of course, later intending to mix it with some music that I bought the rights for. In editing that vocal track, I got it right the first time completely by accident, selecting a section for redoing. I just deleted it, because there was background noise in it. I redid it and for some reason it worked just fine. It put it right back in that same track.
Subsequent trials didn't work so well. Part of my problem is that all of this – to my understanding – is pure metaphysics written in Sanskrit. So I'm feeling my way by trial and error, much as a chimp would. The next time I tried that, selecting and deleting, the cursor jumps down into a new track, with a completely new wave form. And keeps doing that for every edit thereafter. The instructions say that one is supposed to be able to undo whatever it is you been doing right from the get-go, and wouldn't you know I wound up deleting the whole damn file unintentionally, so now I have to start from scratch and hope I don't mess it up again.
It would help me immensely if I could keep the two tracks in front of me on the screen without new ones constantly coming down and crowding out the ones that working. For some reason the waveforms keep disappearing also and it takes considerable monkeying around to get them back – in the same condition as I lost them. How do I keep all these new tracks from crowding in and banishing my 2 main tracks completely from sight?
When I first opened the manual,, I thought "Hey this is great! It's like 'Audacity for Dummies'!" But what I need is "Audacity for Idiots.
