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Posted by Richard Crowley on 08/30/06 04:04
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote ...
>I am completely baffled by Sound Forge. It is supposed to be a sound
>editing program, but seems to me to be a cuts only crude, amateur, two
>channel only program that is useless as a sound editor. I have studied what
>manuals I have, and played with the program, but it is very non-intuitive
>and I can't see how to mix two tracks or even fade a track. The last time I
>had to edit audio, I ended up doing it in Premiere.
>
> Is Audition a lot more capable than that?
Yes, Audition is a lot more capable than that. I have been using
it since before Adobe bought it (when it was "Cool Edit"). It is
quite likely that Audition can do whatever you are seeking.
I use it extensively for both multi-track mixing (for audio productions)
and for "audio sweetening" for my video productions.
> I tried Acid as well, and got nowhere fast.
Likewise. Acid does not appear to be a general-purpose audio
editing application.
> Can anyone tell me what I am missing, or describe the capabilities of
> Audition? Would that be the best multitrack audio editing program?
There are several multitrack audio editing applications in wide use.
Adobe Audition is one of them (the one I use). If you were to ask
on news:rec.audio.pro they might be able to sumarize the differences
between Audition and the other popular apps.
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