Hi, glad it helps. My main expertise has been through editing voice audio and podcasts, not for music. In my recent blog (eato.blog/blog) I outline other tools for music, but I do know you can load multiple audio in the same Audacity project if that’s what you mean.
Thanks for the feedback, glad it helps. For simplicity, I’d always go for mono. You don’t need stereo for voice recorded on single mic. Only use stereo if you want to create impression of audio ‘space’.
Very helpful video: clear, with enough detail to help my post-production work. Thanks for posting this.
Most welcome, glad it helped!
Thanks for using your time to make this video -- very helpful.
Most welcome, glad it helped.
Thank you for this, it'll help me out. Do you by any chance know how to match say a guitar and say piano or drums taken from different tracks?
Hi, glad it helps. My main expertise has been through editing voice audio and podcasts, not for music. In my recent blog (eato.blog/blog) I outline other tools for music, but I do know you can load multiple audio in the same Audacity project if that’s what you mean.
Thank you for this helpful and nicely detailed video. Is it advisable to save voice over audio files as Mono or Stereo?
Thanks for the feedback, glad it helps.
For simplicity, I’d always go for mono. You don’t need stereo for voice recorded on single mic. Only use stereo if you want to create impression of audio ‘space’.
great vid many thanks!
You're welcome!
Great video! Thank you.
Most welcome, glad you liked!
thank you very much!
Very welcome!
thank you very much
Most welcome, glad it helped!
You are the best, thank you x
You’re welcome 😊
This is far easier to do on spectrogram. Unfortunately Audacity doesn't have good spectrogram capabilities. And spectrogram is very low resolution.