Hi All,
I am trying to adjust the speed of some of my MP3s and am having difficulty using SoundForge.
I can load the MP3, adjust the playback speed so it sounds fine to my ear...
but what next? I think I need to apply the new speed to the MP3 and save it, but I can't find out how to do it.
I know I should RTFM but my copy is of dubious origin and the help files are crap .
Or can anyone suggest a quicker, easier way of doing it?
Thanks in advance
SoundForge Geek Help Needed!
- streamline
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- Izzy HaveMercy
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Would love to help you out, but the last time I installed SoundForge is at about ten years ago, I think, so sorrystreamline wrote:Hi All,
I am trying to adjust the speed of some of my MP3s and am having difficulty using SoundForge.
I can load the MP3, adjust the playback speed so it sounds fine to my ear...
but what next? I think I need to apply the new speed to the MP3 and save it, but I can't find out how to do it.
I know I should RTFM but my copy is of dubious origin and the help files are crap .
Or can anyone suggest a quicker, easier way of doing it?
Thanks in advance
IZ.
- streamline
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Is there another program I can use?Izzy HaveMercy wrote: Would love to help you out, but the last time I installed SoundForge is at about ten years ago, I think, so sorry
IZ.
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- Izzy HaveMercy
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Was thinking about CoolEditPro, never worked with it, but maybe it does the trick?streamline wrote:Is there another program I can use?Izzy HaveMercy wrote: Would love to help you out, but the last time I installed SoundForge is at about ten years ago, I think, so sorry
IZ.
IZ.
- James Blast
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what platform are you on Jez?
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- streamline
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That'd be Windoze I'm afraid JamesJames Blast wrote:what platform are you on Jez?
It's probably all done with one keystroke on a Mac....
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Or get Audition.
You can use timestretch, but the results often sound s**t - you can hear that it's been processed and it usually sounds awful.
The way I do it is open a new edit window (file-new), but instead of the default sample rate (44,100), type a number lower or greater than that, then when you have your new window, copy and paste the audio into it (when it says 'are you sure you wish to continue', click yes).
Then after trial and error to get your audio the length you want it, by using different sample rates until you get the right one, click process-resample and resample it back to 44,100.
All that is assuming you already know the length you wish to stretch the audio to. I usually do, but if you don't then I'd imagine the trial and error stage would be even longer!
The way I do it is open a new edit window (file-new), but instead of the default sample rate (44,100), type a number lower or greater than that, then when you have your new window, copy and paste the audio into it (when it says 'are you sure you wish to continue', click yes).
Then after trial and error to get your audio the length you want it, by using different sample rates until you get the right one, click process-resample and resample it back to 44,100.
All that is assuming you already know the length you wish to stretch the audio to. I usually do, but if you don't then I'd imagine the trial and error stage would be even longer!
- streamline
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Thanks for all of your replies - I have now ditched Soundforge and aquired Audition
Ooh it looks complicated! I'm going to trawl the net for a user guide/tutorial and see how I get on.
All of this just to get the speed on some of my bootlegs correct
Ooh it looks complicated! I'm going to trawl the net for a user guide/tutorial and see how I get on.
All of this just to get the speed on some of my bootlegs correct
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I trust you trust in me to mistrust you
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For something like that maybe Soundforge or Audition are overkill? Maybe try Audacity or a demo of Goldwave instead? For Goldwave it's just Effect | Time Warp, then Save. Couldn't be easier.
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Audition comes with it's own manual (click on Help... lol)
- streamline
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Yeah I did find that one , I was going to look for dumbed-down tutorial walk throughs until mh suggested Goldwave which is doing the job quite nicely.robertzombie wrote:Audition comes with it's own manual (click on Help... lol)
So I have dumped both Soundforge and Audition and I feel a whole lot better for it!
Thanks again to you all.
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In audition (it's were cool edit pro gone to!) you can select the wave portion, and then effects>time/pitch>stretch (process) and then if you want to alter it's lenght but not overall sound use "time stretch, preserves pitch", and mess with the base 100 ratio (200 will be half the time).
- therealsamdevos
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F1 always helps...
greets
samdevos
samdevos