Audacity

How to create your audio files using Audacity!

Audacity

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This tutorial will help you produce all types of sound files. The first thing you will need is a recording program. Audacity is cross-platform - it runs on Windows (98 through XP), Mac OS 9, Mac OS X, and many Unix platforms, including Linux. Audacity is a free audio editor. You can record sounds, play sounds, import and export WAV, AIFF, and MP3 files, and more. Use it to edit your sounds using Cut, Copy and Paste (with unlimited Undo), mix tracks together, or apply effects to your recordings. It also has a built-in amplitude envelope editor, a customizable spectrogram mode and a frequency analysis window for audio analysis applications. Built-in effects include Bass Boost, Wahwah, and Noise Removal, and it also supports VST plug-in effects.

Here is a complete tutorial for Audacity.

I. Basics

II. Editing for Beginners

III. Common Editing Tasks

IV. Effects for Beginners

V. Selecting and Aligning

How Can I Record Myself? The first thing you need is a microphone or some kind of input device. Most multimedia computers come with a microphone, but you can also pick one up from any computer or music store. The microphone can be plugged in directly to the sound card in your computer. Most sound cards use a 1/8" Walkman-type headphone jack, so make sure your microphone is compatible with this. What are the steps of recording? Here is a quick step-by-step guide to recording yourself:

    • Before you start you recording write down what you want to say. When you are recording speak slowly and concisely.
    • Plug your microphone into the mic input in your sound card
    • Open up your audio recorder/editor and put it into record mode
    • Check the input levels to make sure the signal is loud enough, but not too loud.
    • Hit "record" and start speaking
    • When youre finished, hit "stop"
    • Depending on the software you use save it as .wav or .mp3 file
    • If your audio application supports editing, you can remove any unwanted sections

Once you have finished and if your software did not allow you to save as a mp3 or wav, you can use an MP3 encoder to convert your sound file to MP3 format. WAV and AIFF files run about 10MB per 1 minute of CD-quality audio, and converting to MP3 can reduce this by a factor of 12. For some background about MP3, check out our MP3 tutorial. What are the steps of converting my sound file to MP3 format? Heres the remaining steps to convert your audio file to MP3 format:

    • Open your MP3 encoding application
    • Choose the "Convert" function
    • Choose the WAV of AIFF file you want to convert to MP3
    • Choose the sampling rate and bit depth of the MP3. This is usually 44.1 kHZ and 128 bits, and will result in compression by a factor of 12.
    • When you are finished converting, add a title and other background info to the MP3 track using the track editor.