Wayne Reimer
January 4th, 2011, 09:26 AM
I'm still here, still stumbling my way through a project...and looking for advice, again.
I'm in the process of editing a couple of short videos, with multiple sources for material...some shot with a Sony VG-10, some with a Sony Nex, some with a GoPro, stills, audio from the various source cameras, audio recorded on a Zoom H1, as well as background music.
I think I've sorted out the video side of the equation; I have all of the different formats playing well with each other. My question is regarding audio fades. I have a music track separate from interview dialogue, that I need to fade in and out, with volume changes throughout the video. To maintain flow in the final product, I don't want the music track to be muted during the interview portions; instead I want it to be there, barely audible, so that at the end of the commentary dialogue, I can ramp up the music's volume for a few stills, then drop the levels again for more dialogue.
I know..."that's easy to do!"...I'm just having trouble figuring out "easy"...a complicated, convoluted, time-eating method...that's something I can probably come up with... and yes, my wife often tells me I need my head read, to see if the "keep it simple" switch has been accidntally turned off...:^(
So, again I plea for assistance from your learned professionals.........
thanks in advance!
I'm in the process of editing a couple of short videos, with multiple sources for material...some shot with a Sony VG-10, some with a Sony Nex, some with a GoPro, stills, audio from the various source cameras, audio recorded on a Zoom H1, as well as background music.
I think I've sorted out the video side of the equation; I have all of the different formats playing well with each other. My question is regarding audio fades. I have a music track separate from interview dialogue, that I need to fade in and out, with volume changes throughout the video. To maintain flow in the final product, I don't want the music track to be muted during the interview portions; instead I want it to be there, barely audible, so that at the end of the commentary dialogue, I can ramp up the music's volume for a few stills, then drop the levels again for more dialogue.
I know..."that's easy to do!"...I'm just having trouble figuring out "easy"...a complicated, convoluted, time-eating method...that's something I can probably come up with... and yes, my wife often tells me I need my head read, to see if the "keep it simple" switch has been accidntally turned off...:^(
So, again I plea for assistance from your learned professionals.........
thanks in advance!