Oh fantastic! I'm glad this helped! This is a good hack for editing, but for a better sound for your final mix, I recommend this Adobe Audition tutorial ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qh5OYS1hPW0.html
Thank you man...i've always wondered how to get that transition out sound...i messed with a couple stuff but never sounded right...this did the trick...thank you.
This tutorial is intended for a more intermediate audience, but to add an audio fade, click the cut you want a fade on and either use go to the "Sequence" menu and select "Apply Audio Transition." The default keyboard shortcut on a Mac is "Shift+Command+D"
why didn't you show how to do it in DaVinci Resolve? Just kidding, you're the real MVP of editing tutorials. To the point, fast and for every damn editing system. Amazing.
Derek Lieu tho every time I do it on ae it sounds shit :) it’s so hard to get the eco sound with ae reverb it feels like. I have played around with so many options but...
You mean what settings do I use? I just use the Essential Sound “Heavy Reverb” setting turned all the way up for my rough versions, but o use Adobe Audition when I need a good sounding reverb when I finish.
A really fun way to apply D-Verb in Avid is using the RTAS effects which apply the audio real time without the need for the mixdown. You can devote an entire audio track to D-verb and drop the beats or effects you need to reverb. Thanks for the tutorial, it's helpful for me now that I'm using with Premiere more.
Do you know how to do this exact effect on sony vegas pro 15? Or know of a video or explanation that someone else has done maybe? I've been searching for hours and there are only a couple instructions on forums but their directions aren't very clear.
The default Premiere shortcut is Shift+Cmd+D. If you want to change it to your own setting, go to your Keyboard Shortcuts and search for "Apply Audio Transition"
Ah I see what you're saying. Yes, I used my preset in the tutorial at 1:36 before explaining what setting it was at 2:18. I wanted to explain the principle before showing the exact settings, but I probably should've showed the exact settings first.
Sorry, I'm not sure how to do this in After Effects. Alternately, if you have Premiere, another editing program or Audacity, you could apply the effect there, export it, then import it into After Effects and re-sync it.
THANKS A MILLION! I was about to give up on using this effect but then I found your video. Just a doubt though: what do I have to do if I want the reverb effect to be more intense? Like with repeating spikes of audio? Thanks.
You're welcome! Repeating spikes of audio is probably a different effect like a delay or echo. This technique should apply to those too because the core problem this is solving is having enough of a clip to apply the effect to.
That's odd, it definitely made a new nested sequence that's a different color clip, and when you double-click it absolutely nothing happens? Also, a nested sequence will show up in in your bins, so look for it there too.
Can you tell me if you can do this effect in Adobe Audition? I've been wanting to learn this effect but I'm reluctant to purchase Premiere Pro. It might be wasteful for me because I only want to use the audio editor.
Yep! I'd love to make more, but I just struggle to find the time to make them especially at this level of quality. Are there specific things you're looking to learn how to do?
I struggle with Sound, Sound effects and when best to use to add impact or tension to a cut. but i fully understand not having any time to make vids like this..Appreciate the reply
Ah, that's something that's much more subjective. My suggestion in the meantime is to watch a lot of stuff, and experiment. For an extreme example, watch some episodes of Hell's Kitchen. The sound effects in those are incredibly over the top.
You should be able to do it in After Effects too using it’s built in reverb effect. Instead of nesting, you should pre-comp and then lengthen the duration of that pre-comp so there’s room for the audio to reverb out.
Thanks so much! I was doing it the hard way, exporting the audio clip, taking it to Cubase or Audition having to add time there, etc but I knew there had to be a smoother way.
That's the "Extend previous edit to playhead" shortcut! I have my favorite editing shortcuts all listed here: www.derek-lieu.com/blog/2014/07/08/26-simple-tricks-for-faster-editing-premiere-pro-cc
Check out the blog post I wrote to go with this video! Once you've added the "reverb" effect from Premiere, in the "Effect Controls" panel, right-click the "reverb" effect to save the preset www.derek-lieu.com/blog/2016/10/03/how-to-make-a-sound-reverb-out
Derek Lieu swwweeeet. Also glad I clicked on this video as I was originally just gonna ask a question, but this is one of hot many things I've been wanting to know how to do, thanks!