Great Quick Tip Tuesday, thank you! What do you mean when you label a VO with the word "bounce?" I assume you mean that you have adjusted the VO in some way, but how?
Bounce means that i've changed the track or clip in some way (adding an effect or changing the levels for example) and then the track is essential 'rendered' or bounced and put into a new track. So the bounced file/clip has the changes baked in it.
You can think of 'bouncing' in this video as 'rendering the audio track with the effects'. Essentially creating one audio clip with the effects and changes baked into it. That's the way I was referring to it in this vid.
Are you planning on doing a VST sidechain demonstration in the v19 beta? I still can't find any demonstrations of this in action, so you'd be the first one. I'd love to see how it works, but I'm not ready to jump on the beta version just yet. Thanks!
I would just do that while you’re editing. Make a freeze frame in the video of that particular part where you wanted to pause. You can’t pause the playback in da adventure resolve because then you’re not recording. Basically, I would edit your video part first and then do your voice over to go along with it or at least edit the video a little bit so that it has your pauses built into it during playback
@@JasonYadlovski thanks for the feedback. Currently I do exactely how you describe it. I would prefer DR to implement this feature in order to avoid to much manipulations in EDIT mode. 🙏
The other way I might do it is to do a screen recording playing back the video, record your VO separately, so you can pause or stop the playback of the video but the screen recording will continue to record and the talking head of your doing the voiceover (or just the audio) will also keep recording. This is how I make UA-cam Vids. 😜
Ideally, you would have two microphones, one for each person. But if you only have one microphone, you want to use one that has a Omni directional pick up pattern or something like the blue yeti or you can do a pick up pattern for the front and rear of the microphone. You can use something like a gate or an expander to help reduce the bleed between the two mics.
@@JasonYadlovski Cheers - what I mean is I already have the questions recorded and sent to me and I want to record the answers, if that makes sense. Obviously I don't know exactly how long my answers will be, Currently all the questions are in individual clips on a timeline. Any suggestion as to the most efficient way to record my responses?l
Oh, I see, thanks for the clarification. I'd just make cuts in the timeline on the questions clips and move the questions where you need them based on how long your answer is to said question. Maybe when recording your answers, just record one long file with all your answers, then just do the same for the answers, cut up the clip in the timeline and move the answers clips to where you need them. Does that make sense?
Great Quick Tip Tuesday, thank you! What do you mean when you label a VO with the word "bounce?" I assume you mean that you have adjusted the VO in some way, but how?
Bounce means that i've changed the track or clip in some way (adding an effect or changing the levels for example) and then the track is essential 'rendered' or bounced and put into a new track. So the bounced file/clip has the changes baked in it.
Would you have to individually name all the already recorded audio files...
... if you added the audio name too late?
If you didn't have the track named when you recorded, then you'd have to rename them individually. Unless you used another method outside of Resolve.
PLZ explain what BOUNCE means
You can think of 'bouncing' in this video as 'rendering the audio track with the effects'. Essentially creating one audio clip with the effects and changes baked into it. That's the way I was referring to it in this vid.
Are you planning on doing a VST sidechain demonstration in the v19 beta? I still can't find any demonstrations of this in action, so you'd be the first one. I'd love to see how it works, but I'm not ready to jump on the beta version just yet. Thanks!
Yup, I’ll have one. 😁👍
@@JasonYadlovski Awesome! 🥳
Jason, thanks for the audio tip. Please do another video on actually showing how you record the audio track with an audio interface. Thanks!
Keep doing great things bro! Love Quick Tip Tuesday!
For music would a mono track be better than a stereo
For music, a stereo track is always better than a mono track. For dialogue, typically you could use mono, but the stereo is also OK.
Always love a Quick Tip Tuesday 😁...cheers, Jason 🤘🙏
I want to voiceover so that when I pause the video then the voice continues to be recorded while video in pause mode.
Is it possible ?
I would just do that while you’re editing. Make a freeze frame in the video of that particular part where you wanted to pause. You can’t pause the playback in da adventure resolve because then you’re not recording.
Basically, I would edit your video part first and then do your voice over to go along with it or at least edit the video a little bit so that it has your pauses built into it during playback
@@JasonYadlovski thanks for the feedback. Currently I do exactely how you describe it.
I would prefer DR to implement this feature in order to avoid to much manipulations in EDIT mode. 🙏
The other way I might do it is to do a screen recording playing back the video, record your VO separately, so you can pause or stop the playback of the video but the screen recording will continue to record and the talking head of your doing the voiceover (or just the audio) will also keep recording. This is how I make UA-cam Vids. 😜
What's the best way to record one side of an interview when I already have all the questions from the other side?
Ideally, you would have two microphones, one for each person. But if you only have one microphone, you want to use one that has a Omni directional pick up pattern or something like the blue yeti or you can do a pick up pattern for the front and rear of the microphone. You can use something like a gate or an expander to help reduce the bleed between the two mics.
@@JasonYadlovski Cheers - what I mean is I already have the questions recorded and sent to me and I want to record the answers, if that makes sense. Obviously I don't know exactly how long my answers will be, Currently all the questions are in individual clips on a timeline. Any suggestion as to the most efficient way to record my responses?l
Oh, I see, thanks for the clarification. I'd just make cuts in the timeline on the questions clips and move the questions where you need them based on how long your answer is to said question. Maybe when recording your answers, just record one long file with all your answers, then just do the same for the answers, cut up the clip in the timeline and move the answers clips to where you need them. Does that make sense?
@@JasonYadlovski Yeah it does thanks mate
Oh, nice! I'm gonna now use it! So cool!
😜👍