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	<description>Final Cut Pro X Plugins &#38; Tutorials</description>
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		<title>Final Cut Pro X Audio Editing</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 22:15:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dylan Higginbotham</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[4 Flares 4 Flares &#215; Disclaimer: I didn&#8217;t make this video but I did transcribe it. I hope the transcription is helpful. Transcription Steve: Welcome back to MacBreak Studio. Here we are again with Mark Spencer and this time, you&#8217;re<span class="ellipsis">&#8230;</span><div class="read-more"><a href="http://stupidraisins.com/final-cut-pro-x-audio-editing">Read more &#8250;</a></div><!-- end of .read-more -->]]></description>
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<p><em>Disclaimer: I didn&#8217;t make this video but I did transcribe it. I hope the transcription is helpful.</em></p>
<h2>Transcription</h2>
<p>Steve: Welcome back to MacBreak Studio. Here we are again with Mark<br />
Spencer and this time, you&#8217;re going to show us some really cool stuff with<br />
audio in Final Cut Pro X.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah, audio, and music doing motion. But the fact is you and I,<br />
we make a lot of tutorials, right?</p>
<p>Steve: Yup.</p>
<p>Mark. A lot of tutorials. And we record voice over frequently.</p>
<p>Steve: Soundtrack Pro is my tool of choice.</p>
<p>Mark: Soundtrack Pro had been my tool of choice until Final Cut Pro X<br />
came along.</p>
<p>Steve: And you can actually edit voice over in Final Cut?</p>
<p>Mark: You can do everything in Final Cut Pro X. So I just want to<br />
show you, and this is actually useful even if you&#8217;re not doing<br />
your own voice over. But you can be doing a temp voice over<br />
track for a documentary or something, or just editing audio as a<br />
part of something you&#8217;ve shot. It doesn&#8217;t matter. But if you do<br />
want to record your own audio in Final Cut Pro X under the<br />
Window menu, which you might not think to look there.</p>
<p>Steve: It is odd that it&#8217;s in the Window menu.</p>
<p>Mark: It used to be tools, yeah. And now there&#8217;s this record audio<br />
under the Window menu. It just brings up basically a HUD<br />
interface and you click the red button and you record. What will<br />
happen is it will drop it in the current timeline and it will<br />
also drop it into a selected event for you.</p>
<p>Steve: So event and/or timeline?</p>
<p>Mark: It actually will do both. It always puts it both in event and<br />
timeline as far as I can tell, but definitely in event. You<br />
choose your input device; whatever is connected. I use a little<br />
road, probably as you can see there.</p>
<p>Steve: That&#8217;s your studio set-up at home.</p>
<p>Mark: This is my little studio set-up. I have a little boom with a<br />
microphone. This is a road podcaster microphone; I like the<br />
sound. It&#8217;s a good sounding microphone and that way I&#8217;m not<br />
touching it or interacting with it. Try to keep the same<br />
distance and everything. So that&#8217;s what I use. But then it will<br />
just show up in the input device here and then you can adjust<br />
the gain, you can choose to monitor, and you&#8217;re off and running.<br />
So, very easy to record audio. Go ahead.</p>
<p>Steve: You just close the window. Aren&#8217;t you going to record?</p>
<p>Mark: I did. No, I&#8217;m not going to record anything.</p>
<p>Steve: Oh, I thought you were.</p>
<p>Mark: No, no, I&#8217;ve already got some here.</p>
<p>Steve: Prerecorded.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah, so I&#8217;ve got here a little tutorial. It could be any audio<br />
and I&#8217;m just going to edit it. I&#8217;m just going E and bring that<br />
into my timeline. I&#8217;ve got a new project here so I&#8217;m just going<br />
to say okay, conform to that. I&#8217;ll hit shift Z to fit it and<br />
here&#8217;s what I love. I&#8217;ve tried it out and discovered that it was<br />
faster and easier than Soundtrack Pro. And I love Soundtrack<br />
Pro, but this is even better because I&#8217;m already where I&#8217;m going<br />
to be working going forward so I don&#8217;t need a separate app. One<br />
thing I do is I go down to this little switch here for the clip<br />
appearance and I choose the biggest wave form I can, okay. So<br />
I&#8217;ve got a nice, big wave form.</p>
<p>Steve: I want to see it. There&#8217;s also a clip height slider. How big<br />
can you make it actually?</p>
<p>Mark: Oh yeah, that&#8217;s true. You can make it really big.</p>
<p>Steve: That&#8217;s [mondo] size.</p>
<p>Mark: Okay, yeah. So let&#8217;s go for that. Right now, shift Z fit it to<br />
the window but usually I&#8217;ll command plus several times so I can<br />
really kind of see this image in wave forms.</p>
<p>Steve: It is a little odd to me, though, to see half a wave form.</p>
<p>Mark: Half, right, right, right.</p>
<p>Steve: Like where&#8217;s the other half?</p>
<p>Mark: But the other half looks the same, right?</p>
<p>Steve: It&#8217;s like a moose head on the wall. Where&#8217;s the rest of the<br />
moose? So I don&#8217;t know why I thought of that.</p>
<p>Mark: But this gets the job done because frequent I&#8217;ll do repeated<br />
takes and you&#8217;ll be able to tell because you&#8217;ll listen and hear<br />
the same phrase over and over again. And you&#8217;ll see that the<br />
sound wave form looks identical from one to the next.</p>
<p>So I&#8217;m actually not going to play anything here. I just wanted to<br />
show you how easy the editing is. I don&#8217;t even need to select a<br />
clip. So let&#8217;s say I want to cut out this here. Let&#8217;s say this<br />
was a bad phrase. I listen to it and it&#8217;s a bad phrase. I have<br />
skimming turned on. That&#8217;s why we&#8217;ve got this red line moving.</p>
<p>Steve: But I don&#8217;t hear the audio skimming.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah, and let&#8217;s say I&#8217;ve already played so I&#8217;m past this point<br />
with the play head and I&#8217;m like oh, I need to cut this out. So<br />
yeah, audio skimming&#8217;s not turned on so let me enable it right<br />
there. Let me zoom in so you can see this will enable the audio<br />
skimming right there. Let&#8217;s see the tool tip will come up; audio<br />
skimming.</p>
<p>Steve: Shift desk.</p>
<p>Mark: Okay, shift desk. Thank you. And now it will skim the audio as<br />
well and I can sort of listen. I don&#8217;t need to click. This is<br />
what I love. Usually you would click and then cut it there, but<br />
without clicking I&#8217;m just going to his command B, which will<br />
immediately blade right there, right. And then I can move over<br />
on this other side. Command B to blade it, so that&#8217;s part of<br />
what I love. By using skimming you don&#8217;t need to click anywhere<br />
first. Just command B, command B, and it&#8217;s fast. You might be<br />
like, what&#8217;s the big deal about clicking? You just click a<br />
button. But, you know, over and over and over again and it adds<br />
up.</p>
<p>Steve: Yes, you get carpal click syndrome.</p>
<p>Mark: Carpal click syndrome, yeah. And it takes more time.</p>
<p>Steve: Yeah, it does take more time.</p>
<p>Mark: So here&#8217;s the second cool thing. When I select that to get rid<br />
of it and hit delete, automatically everything moves down and<br />
closes the gap because of the magnetic timeline, right. And if I<br />
didn&#8217;t want that, I can always shift delete and get a gap if I<br />
wanted to that.</p>
<p>Steve: To keep the timing.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah if I wanted to keep the timing. Frequently for what I&#8217;m<br />
doing, it&#8217;s a repeated phrase that I didn&#8217;t say right the first<br />
time so I&#8217;m just hitting delete. And then I go and I might find<br />
another thing; command B, command B, select delete. Hit the back<br />
arrow to go back to that next and just keep playing. And I can&#8217;t<br />
tell you how fast this has made the process of my editing.</p>
<p>Another thing is I&#8217;m a little hot here. So maybe I got a little<br />
excited when I was speaking, a little hot. It&#8217;s not bad, but if<br />
I wanted to change it I can hit R for the range tool and I can<br />
select a range and then I can just lower that piece down.</p>
<p>Steve: That&#8217;s pretty slick and fast.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah. Very, very fast and easy. And it feels just good to use a<br />
tool. There&#8217;s nothing clunky about it. It&#8217;s very smooth.</p>
<p>Steve: It feels organic to what you&#8217;re doing.</p>
<p>Mark: Yup, yup. Let&#8217;s say you did want to create a gap here. I&#8217;m a<br />
little bit further so I&#8217;m going to H for the hand tool. That<br />
allows me to pan around, okay. So we used R for the range, we<br />
used command B to blade, H for the hand tool. I&#8217;ll go back to A<br />
for the anchor, oh my goodness. I&#8217;m getting my emotion showing.</p>
<p>Steve: Selection tool; A for selection tool.</p>
<p>Mark: Or the arrow tool, yeah. Now I&#8217;m going to blade this. Now let&#8217;s<br />
say there&#8217;s not enough space here. I wanted to have a little<br />
more breathing room because I&#8217;m just talking too much and people<br />
need to see.</p>
<p>Steve: You&#8217;re stepping on your own words and whatever.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah, or people need to see, have a little bit of a breather.<br />
So I want to move it over. So normally you can&#8217;t; you try to<br />
drag it and it goes right back. But if you hit P for the<br />
position tool and then I can drag it. It will leave a gap, but<br />
you showed me something even cooler than that. So I&#8217;m going to<br />
undo that, go back to where I was. Select it. Rather than<br />
dragging it, I can just type in a value. I want to move it<br />
forward let&#8217;s say&#8230;</p>
<p>Steve: 10 frames.</p>
<p>Mark: Let&#8217;s say 10 frames or let&#8217;s say a whole second. Say plus one<br />
point, one period. You see it shows up in the dashboard. Return,<br />
and immediately it moves it one second forward.</p>
<p>Steve: And leaves a gap to [inaudible 06:37].</p>
<p>Mark: And leaves a gap. Yeah, so very, very quickly and accurately I<br />
can create gaps. I can close gaps. I can edit out unwanted<br />
material and before I know it I have a nicely edited piece. And<br />
once I get it well done, I&#8217;ll actually switch back to something<br />
nice and small like this. Once I&#8217;ve got the whole thing edited,<br />
so I&#8217;ve got a very small track.</p>
<p>At this point if you were doing this to audio that was part of video,<br />
your video would already be in here. But at this point you can<br />
cut in your B-roll, you can cut in all your other pieces, you&#8217;ve<br />
got a perfect audio bed to cut to.</p>
<p>Steve: It&#8217;s fantastic. I would have never thought of using Final Cut<br />
Pro as a sound editor but I can see that it would be very fluid,<br />
very quick; even faster than Soundtrack Pro in a lot of way.</p>
<p>Mark: Yeah, it&#8217;s not something I would have done in Final Cut 7<br />
because the tools just weren&#8217;t relay there. But this is just<br />
fast. Especially, I don&#8217;t have to launch another app to do this.<br />
I&#8217;m just set to go right here in Final Cut Pro X.</p>
<p>Steve: Excellent. Well, if you do a lot of voice over editing or<br />
cutting, or long takes with audio, even music I would imagine,<br />
it&#8217;s a tremendous tool. It can work a lot faster. This is why we<br />
like Final Cut Pro X. It really is a much faster tool than the<br />
other [NLEs] in terms of this bread and butter type of stuff. So<br />
Mark, what are you working on these days?</p>
<p>Mark: So I&#8217;ve got a new tutorial out. My Motion 5: Fast-Forward,<br />
Basic Training in Motion and Training and Rigging to Publishing<br />
for Making Effects for Final Cut Pro X. But I&#8217;ve got a new<br />
product out, all about particles in motion. Using particles in<br />
motion to do all kinds of interesting things with smoke and fire<br />
and a bunch of other stuff that you can use particles for in<br />
your everyday projects. For titles, for transitions, for<br />
whatever you want.</p>
<p>Steve: Excellent. And you&#8217;ll find that at rippletraining.com. Mark<br />
thanks for showing us some really cool tricks about working with<br />
sound and thanks for watching another episode of MacBreak<br />
Studio.</p>
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