User Guide
Chapter 11: Working With Audio
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Audio files can also be opened from the File menu with the command Open Audio (WAV, WMA, MP3, WMV).
Open an MP3/WAV/WMA or audio CD track, and play back at 1/2, 1/4, or 1/8 speed. This is great for transcribing
or analyzing audio.
If you load in an audio song (WAV file, MP3), when the song plays you can:
- change the tempo of the audio to slow/speed up the song.
- press Ctrl+[-] for half speed, Ctrl+[=] for full speed.
- highlight an area of the Audio Edit window and press [Play Selected Area]. This will loop the audio.
- use the Audio | Set Audio Master (Base) Tempo menu item to insure that tempo stretches are based on correct
master tempo.
These features are useful as an aid for transcription.
Using the Half-Speed Audio feature to help you transcribe a piece of music.
Once you open the Audio file, open the Audio window and you can see the audio data on the track.
Choose “Half-speed tempo” (Ctrl+minus (-) hot key). Ctrl+equals (=) returns to normal tempo. (Use the Play |
Tempo menu for slower speeds like 1/4, 1/8.)
Highlight the range that you want to hear, and then press “Play Selected Area.”
You can then move around the window to play different sections as you transcribe the
recording.
Audio Offset
The Audio Offset feature allows you to synchronize any point of the audio file with bar 1 of the Band-in-a-Box
song – usually to sync the audio file with the rest of the song.
Let’s say you have a home recording of a live performance of one of your songs, saved as a WAV file (or
MP3/WMA). File | Open Audio will load the song into Band-in-a-Box.
Now open up the Audio Edit window, and when you hear the point in the file that you would like to be
considered bar 1, right click at that point, and answer YES to “would you like this point to be bar 1.”