227 Adjusting audio volume You might want to decrease or increase the volume of an entire clip or parts of a
clip. For example, you might need to decrease the natural sound on a video clip by
half while you narrate, gradually fade up the audio at the start or end of a clip, or
fade up an interview just as the narrator completes a segment. The last example is
part of a J-cut or L-cut. These will be explained later in the lesson. Let’s adjust the
volume on a clip:
1 Choose Window > Workspace > Reset Current Workspace to get your
workspace back in order. Click Yes in the Reset Workspace dialog.
2 Double-click the Completed sequence to open it in the Timeline.
3 Expand the track view of the Audio 5 track (Medieval_JB02.aif ) by clicking the
Collapse/Expand Track triangle.
4 Click the Show keyframes button and choose Show Clip Keyframes to ensure
you are looking at clip keyframes.
You can now edit a clip’s volume in the Timeline rather than using the Volume
effect in the Effect Controls panel.
5 On the Audio 5 track, hover your pointer over the volume level graph—the
thin, horizontal yellow line between the left and right channels—until it turns
into the Vertical Adjustment tool pointer, and then drag that yellow line up and
down. This adjustment allows you to increase and decrease the volume of the
entire audio track at one time. If you think this track drowns out the dialogue
just a bit, drop it to about –5 or –6 dB and see whether it sounds better. Once
you’re done experimenting, return the volume level to 0 dB for no change
in volume.
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Note: A dB (decibel)
level readout gives
you feedback on the
volume change (0 dB
is the default starting
point no matter the
actual volume of the
original clip). It’s not
easy to move to an
exact setting. You use
the Volume effect in the
Effect Controls panel to
do that.