This effect increases or decreases the volume of a track or set of
tracks. When you open the dialog, Audacity automatically
calculates the maximum amount you could amplify the selected audio
without causing clipping (from being too loud).
This is a safe, smooth filter which can amplify the lower frequencies
while leaving most of the other frequencies alone. It is most effective
if you don't try to boost too much; 12 dB is usually just right.
A simple delay line.
This effect repeats the audio you have selected again and again,
softer each time. There is a fixed time delay between each repeat.
First select the audio you want to apply the effect to.
You may want to first add silence to the end of your track(s) so
that the echo has plenty of time to die out. When you select
"Echo..." from the Effect menu, Audacity will ask you for two numbers.
The first number is the amount of delay between the echos, in seconds.
The second value is the decay factor, which is a number between
0 and 1. A decay factor of 0 means no echo, and a decay factor
of 1 means that each echo is just as loud as the original. A value
of 0.5 means that its amplitude is cut in half each time, so it
dies out slowly. Smaller values will make it die out even more
quickly.
The Echo effect is very simple and is not intended to be used
in place of a Reverb effect, which simulates the sound of a
room, concert hall, stage, or other natural environment.
Audacity for MacOS and Windows comes with FreeVerb, a free VST
Reverb plug-in. See FreeVerb, below,
for more information.
Note that if you set the decay value to 1.0, you can use Echo
to create loops that repeat as long as you want any never
change volume.
Applies a linear fade-in to the selected audio. For a logarithmic
fade, use the envelope tool.
Applies a linear fade-out to the selected audio. For a logarithmic
fade, use the envelope tool.
This effect is fully functional but the dialog box is unfortunately
still under construction. You can still use it, but there are no
axes to tell you which frequencies are which, or how much gain you're
applying.
This is the most general type of filter. If you're careful, you
can use it to highlight exactly the frequencies you want.
However, doing an FFT filter is more likely to result in
artifacts, especially if the filter you draw is not smooth.
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This effect flips the audio samples upside-down. This normally
does not affect the sound of the audio at all. It is occasionally
useful, for example when the left and right channels of a song
both contain equal amounts of vocals, but unequal amounts of
background instruments. By inverting one of the channels and
not the other, the vocals will cancel each other out, leaving
just the instrumentals. Obviously this only works if the exact
same vocal signal is present in both of the channels to begin
with.
This effect is ideal for removing constant background noise such as
fans, tape noise, or hums. It will not work very well for removing
talking or music in the background.
Removing noise is a two-step process. In the first step, you select
a portion of your sound which contains all noise and no signal,
in other words, select the part that's silent except for the noise.
Then choose Noise Removal... from the Effect menu and click
Get Profile. Audacity learns from this selection what the noise
sounds like, so it knows what to filter out later.
Then, select all of the audio where you want the noise removed from
and choose Noise Removal... again. This time, click the
"Remove Noise" button. It may take a few seconds or longer depending
on how much you selected.
If too much or not enough noise was removed, you can Undo
(from the Edit menu) and try Noise Removal... again with a
different noise removal level. You don't have to get a new noise
profile again if you think the first one was fine.
Removing noise usually results in some distortion. This is normal
and there's virtually nothing you can do about it. When there's only
a little bit of noise, and the signal (i.e. the voice or the music or
whatever) is much louder than the noise, this effect works well and
there's very little audible distortion. But when the noise is very
loud, when the noise is variable, or when the signal is not much
louder than the noise, then the result is often too distorted.
Future versions of Audacity may include improved versions of this
effect.
The name "Phaser" comes from "Phase Shifter", because it
works by combining phase-shifted signals with the original
signal. The movement of the phase-shifted signals is
controlled using a Low Frequency Oscillator (LFO).
This effect reverses the selected audio temporally; after the
effect the end of the audio will be heard first and the
beginning last. Some people reverse small portions of audio
to make inappropriate language unintelligible, while others
believe you can hear subliminal messages if you listen to
speech backwards. You can also create interesting sound
effects by recording natural events and reversing the audio.
Just like that guitar sound so popular in the 1970's.
This effect uses a moving bandpass filter to create its
sound. A low frequency oscillator (LFO) is used to
control the movement of the filter throughout the
frequency spectrum.
The WahWah effect automatically adjusts the phase of
the left and right channels when given a stereo
recording, so that the effect seems to travel across
the speakers.
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