![]() Highlight the music track (‘Music Bed’) by clicking in the ‘track header’. Yes, of course, we need to dip the music under the ‘Voice Over’ file so that both elements mix together in perfect harmony.Īgain, there are a few optional ways we can do this. ![]() But what’s this? When it hits the voice over, our limiter is working overtime, peaks are in the red and the voice over is completely lost in amongst a muddy dirge of frequencies. We click shift + spacebar to play from the start of the project and the music plays in nicely. ![]() Now we should get a nice couple of seconds of music before the voice over kicks in. So with the music at 00:00:00, we now place the voice over at 00:00:02.500. This gives us 2.5 seconds of music to use at the start and end of the promo to wrap around the voice. Our voice over is 30 seconds long, while thanks to timestretching, the music is now 35 seconds in duration. In this exercise we continue with our project to produce a 35 second promo ad for a garden centre, by examining ways to mix, add FX and then render our finished project. In part one of this tutorial, we looked at importing and timestretching audio files in Sony Vegas Pro 8 ®. By Simon Power In this series of articles we will be offering fundamental help and advice to amateur and semi-pro audio/visual producers who use Sony Vegas and want to incorporate music, voice overs and SFX in their productions. ![]()
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