Thread: What audio Editor do you use?

Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14
  1. #1 What audio Editor do you use? 
    Senior Member Keith Nealy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    327
    What audio Editor do you use?

    Sound forge 10a says Red audio format not supported.

    What editor works?

    Thanks.

    Keith

    So far I love Vegas. very intuitive.
    Keith Nealy Productions
    Big Island Hawaii
    EPIC -X
    www.keithnealy.com
    Reply With Quote  
     

  2. #2  
    Vegas is great but for real output I prefer ProTools. The audio recorded by the RED isn't incompatible with Sound Forge though. Sound Forge likely just doesn't open R3D files. RED is 48K 24Bit PCM. Any sound editor will work.

    1 - Cut your piece without any audio effects (Panning, Level Automation is OK)
    2 - Export OMF with handles at 24Bit 48K PCM/WAV/AIFF
    3 - Ingest into ProTools (Or other: Nuendo is the natural second choice)
    4 - Mix, Sweeten, ADR, Foley etc...
    5 - Output in the polyphonic format of your choice
    6 - Import to your finishing software
    7 - Export your project with both audio and video.

    Caveat 1:
    ProTools LE requires DVTK2 or Complete Production Toolkit for OMF (Digitranslator)

    Solution 1:
    Shell out extra, or just get an HD TDM rig. The LE system is SO much cheaper that it really does make sense for smaller studios.

    Caveat 2:
    Not all editorial software supports OMF (Stupid!)

    Solution 2:
    You should be cutting with a professional tool. Ditch your editor.

    Caveat 3:
    FCP has a 2GB barrier on OMF exports and cannot include whole files, just handle lengths.

    Solution 3:
    Break your project into reels. The best place to do that is where you can have a frame of digital silence to accommodate the reel change. Don't do it in the middle of scenes.

    Bonus Info:
    Premiere makes a sexy OMF but doesn't natively support TC for Dual system audio in a reasonable fashion. The one real thing holding me back from pushing it as a platform in TV/Features.

    Best luck!
    Michael "Strawberry" Romano
    ICG Local 600 DIT | West Coast USA | Honolulu, Hawaii
    Mobile: 239-218-4452
    http://www.strawberrycolor.com/
    http://www.sightandsoundhawaii.com/
    Reply With Quote  
     

  3. #3  
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Western Colorado
    Posts
    518
    I strongly 2nd everything Michael said. ProTools is the de facto standard for good reason. And the process, pros, cons pointed out are spot on. We do it all the time.
    Anson Fogel
    Forge Motion Pictures
    www.forgemotionpictures.com
    Reply With Quote  
     

  4. #4  
    Senior Member Kwan Khan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    2,592
    How about logic pro9?
    Rent 5K for $500/day - NYC (Times Square)
    www.finalfootage.com

    EPIC-X + Rocket, RPP, 18-50, Nikon 17-35, 50, 80-200, A-Mount, MBPro, VF FF, Pancro Budget Kit, Pana 17", JVC 20".

    Green Screen Studio @ Times Square (with Reflecmedia), Kino 8'4/4'4/2'4' Kit, Arri Kit, Lite Panle, EZ-JIB + Varizoom Remote Head, Indie-Dolly kit, Cine-Slider, Glidecam X-10 & 20 with SEGWAY,

    MBP (Retina), MacPro, RAID system (Promise Pegasus), Adobe Production (CS6), FCS2, Resolve 9 with MC Color.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  5. #5  
    Another for Pro Tools :) I like Vegas too by the way, but at some point you'll want to get into the Pro Tools thing, I think.

    Logic or Nuendo works and can very likely give you more technical performance for the money... but to me you don't quite get the speed in terms of nitty-gritty audio editing.

    Pro Tools just feels "smoother". For every problem in film audio you hit, someone has hit it before, complained to Avid and eventually a solution or workaround was found. Or Avid added a feature or made something work more clearly to avoid that problem.

    Little things such dragging and dropping two mono tracks to combine them into a stereo track just work nicely.

    Plus the bonus is that most mixing stages work in Pro Tools. You also have a better talent base of Pro Tools sound guys.

    Also, it's just useful to have Pro Tools lying around. For example, we did an ADR session in Japan for a short film because the actors were there... and I was in LA.

    I just said "give me the project file" and voila, I got a nice Pro Tools project of the session, ready to go, video track and everything.

    If I were in Logic or Nuendo there would have been an additional step of an OMF export, etc. They would view it as an extra hassle. Wouldn't have been fun to explain when working across languages.

    Bruce Allen
    www.boacinema.com
    Reply With Quote  
     

  6. #6  
    Senior Member Keith Nealy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    327
    Thanks for all the great info guys.

    I'm totally there with you about Protools and I've been using Nuendo for years. I was just disappointed that Sound Forge didn't have a solution yet as I've been using it for audio fixes for years. I'll bet they solve that soon. Sony was very quick getting Vegas to support Red and being that it was an audio program first I would think they would fix this quickly - one would hope anyway.

    aloha,

    Keith

    BTW, Mike - just did a shoot with Keala at volcano the other day.
    Keith Nealy Productions
    Big Island Hawaii
    EPIC -X
    www.keithnealy.com
    Reply With Quote  
     

  7. #7  
    Keala the grip? Wish I was in volcano! Doing Hawaii 5-0 and an indie feature right now. Tons of schedule juggling and townie locations!
    Michael "Strawberry" Romano
    ICG Local 600 DIT | West Coast USA | Honolulu, Hawaii
    Mobile: 239-218-4452
    http://www.strawberrycolor.com/
    http://www.sightandsoundhawaii.com/
    Reply With Quote  
     

  8. #8  
    Senior Member Keith Nealy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    327
    Vince Keala Lucero. He was the DIT and equipment provider for SandS on this shoot we did for a company out of LA. Good Luck on 5-0.

    Aloha, Keith
    Keith Nealy Productions
    Big Island Hawaii
    EPIC -X
    www.keithnealy.com
    Reply With Quote  
     

  9. #9  
    Senior Member Chris Luker's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Salt Lake City, sometimes France
    Posts
    499
    One more for Protools... but I'm a full time audio guy. My Protools rig cost me more than my RED.
    Sonar has been good to me on PC as well. And it's cheaper.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  10. #10  
    Senior Member joshua csehak's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Cambridge, MA
    Posts
    300
    I hate Pro Tools. Well, to be more specific, I love Pro Tools, but hate Digidesign (or avid now? I think they've been completely absorbed). Pro Tools is definitely the easiest to use DAW out there, IMO. I started on it in the mid-90's and never had to refer to the manual once (unlike Logic). But I eventually switched to Logic because:

    1. As of a few years ago, Pro Tools had almost no bundled effects, and the ones they had sucked. Even if you bought the Waves plugins, there wasn't one good reverb one, to my ears. Logic, OTOH, has a lot of great plugins, including a great-sounding reverb one. I believe Pro Tools is intended for studios with hardware effects and processors, which are nearly always better than software ones, just insanely more expensive.

    2. You have to use Pro Tools hardware. This is fine if you get a TDM rig, you're using their hardware anyways. But you can't use the Pro Tools software with a non-Avid-approved D/A box. And what's more, for LE (or M-Powered, don't remember which), they made me use a dongle. Using up a USB slot just to prove I'm not a pirate is a real pisser.

    3. They didn't fix their bugs. I remember one bug that was listed on their site as a known bug. It was, "Computer is not able to sleep with Pro Tools installed." Not running, installed. Which means, ever. Their fix? "Set your computer to not go to sleep." Seriously?

    4. But what really got me was the forced upgrades. Here I was sitting pretty with my Audiomedia III card. (Told you this was a while ago :) ) It had 2 analog ins and outs, and a spdif in and out. All you need for 2-track stereo recording. I think it was a PCI card too, so it should theoretically still work today. So I'm sitting there, not long out of college (and thereby not exactly at my most solvent), recording my horrible music. I upgrade the OS. Pro Tools tells me "This version of Pro Tools won't run on this OS. You need to upgrade." So I do. It was only $100 or something. The new upgrade runs, but it tells me the Audiomedia III card isn't supported any more, and it can't use it. They bricked their own product. That's messed up. Contrast that with say, Red. I'd be shocked if even 10 years from now, Red One's aren't supported. So that did it for me. I got an M-Powered system and began the transition to Logic.

    I'd say, if you're building a serious recording studio, or if you're doing work on large-budget movies, get the Pro Tools TDM or HD or similarly fancy rig. And stock your racks with gear from Mercenary (www.mercenary.com). But if you're doing indie movies or bedroom rock, go with Logic or Record (Propellerhead's new DAW). No matter what you use for waveform editing, get Reason for MIDI. It's freaking beautiful.

    Caveat: things may have changed since I switched to Logic. God, I hope they have. Heck, if Avid's treating their customers right, I'd even be open to going back. Logic sure can be confusing sometimes. And it looks like PT comes with more plugins now (of course, that doesn't mean they sound good...).
    Reply With Quote  
     

Posting Permissions
  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts