voiceovertimes.com— Learn how to organize your podcast sessions, simplify your editing and improve your audio mixes. The same concepts apply for editing music, voice-overs or audio for multimedia productions.
Jan 5, 2008View in Crawl 4
garageband is a damn good audio editor. before i did a lot of audio editing, and was on PC i used audacity, which is a good program in its own right, but garageband is a great consumer, and even prosumer application, it can do some things in one click that takes some digging to do in soundtrack pro!
Yes, but other things the article mentions (such as keeping organized, proper panning and levels, and using compression and EQ) apply regardless of which OS you're using
I've been using GarageBand for two years now to create my award winning podcast. It is a fantastic program. I really don't understand people that trash it. I've tried Audacity. It is OK, but I far prefer GarageBand. Sure, Audacity is free, but free doesn't mean better.Don't like GarageBand? Fine don't use it. For me, it works great.
This is a cool instructional. Podcasting is so obviously the new frontier in broadcasting. The catch is that even if you have something interesting to say, you need to say it in an interesting way. If you are interested in a career in voice-over or online radio check out the Radio Connection. They match you with a mentor which specializes in your area of interest, whether is is electronica, Djing, hip hop, or talk radio. <a class="user" href="http://www.radioconnection.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.radioconnection.com</a> for more info !
ajchavarJan 5, 2008
garageband is a damn good audio editor. before i did a lot of audio editing, and was on PC i used audacity, which is a good program in its own right, but garageband is a great consumer, and even prosumer application, it can do some things in one click that takes some digging to do in soundtrack pro!
suave1Jan 5, 2008
Umm.... how exactly is this useful for both PC and a Mac?? Isn't garage band a Mac only software?
muppetmeatJan 5, 2008
yes
seinmanJan 5, 2008
Yes, but other things the article mentions (such as keeping organized, proper panning and levels, and using compression and EQ) apply regardless of which OS you're using
kickJan 6, 2008
Unless you're pirating those programs, your PC isn't any cheaper.
roguescoutJan 6, 2008
<a class="user" href="http://www.tweakheadz.com/guide.htm">http://www.tweakheadz.com/guide.htm</a>Sorry. Added a, "l" to the link. ;)
vfrickJan 6, 2008
I've been using GarageBand for two years now to create my award winning podcast. It is a fantastic program. I really don't understand people that trash it. I've tried Audacity. It is OK, but I far prefer GarageBand. Sure, Audacity is free, but free doesn't mean better.Don't like GarageBand? Fine don't use it. For me, it works great.
mentorwarriorMar 8, 2009
This is a cool instructional. Podcasting is so obviously the new frontier in broadcasting. The catch is that even if you have something interesting to say, you need to say it in an interesting way. If you are interested in a career in voice-over or online radio check out the Radio Connection. They match you with a mentor which specializes in your area of interest, whether is is electronica, Djing, hip hop, or talk radio. <a class="user" href="http://www.radioconnection.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.radioconnection.com</a> for more info !