![]() 3 dB is generally a sweet spot where you have decently loud audio with enough headroom to avoid clipping.Ĭompression is a process of reducing the dynamic range of audio by making the louder part of the audio signal sound quieter and making quieter parts of the signal sound louder. Have some headroom to avoid clipping which might happen while applying other processing effects on the audio and exporting it in a compressed format. Normalizer analyzes your audio file and it looks for the loudest peak and based on the amplitude of that peak it amplifies the audio globally. Unlike Compression, in Normalization a constant gain is applied throughout the entire audio and it doesn't affect the dynamics of the audio. ![]() ![]() Normalization is a process of adding gain to audio for bringing the amplitude to a target level. In this video, you will learn how to get similar volume levels across different clips using tools like Normalizer and Speech Volume leveler.Ġ:16 - Voice overs recorded at different volume levelsġ:22 - Normalization presets in the favorites menuġ:32 - Normalization is not so good if there's a big peakġ:52 - Checking volume levels in multitrackĢ:14 - Using the speech volume leveler effectĢ:40 - Working with the default speech volume leveler settingsģ:42 - Working on the target dynamic rangeĤ:13 - Speech volume leveler advanced settingsĤ:17 - Compressor on the speech volume levelerĤ:50 - Using speech volume leveler on podcastsĥ:15 - Hissing background noise while using the speech volume levelerĥ:45 - Settings to reduce background noiseĦ:45 - Noise gate on speech volume leveler for podcastsħ:53 - All audio is now at the same level using one effect Let us know how you use Audition & what you want to learn about Adobe Audition. We've some interesting articles & videos coming up weekly where we will talk about the tools, workflow & some really cool effects. This is a part of the ongoing Learn series with Mike Russell which will help you get started with Adobe Audition. ![]()
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