This command is used to import audio from a standard audio format into
your project. Use this command if you already have a couple of tracks,
and you want to add another track to the same project, maybe to mix
them together.
Use this command to import anything except MIDI files.
You cannot yet use this option to import Audacity Projects.
This command takes a text file which contains time codes and labels,
and turns them into a Label Track.
This menu command imports MIDI files and puts them into a Note Track. Audacity can display
MIDI files, but cannot play, edit, or save them yet.
This menu command allows you to open a file in virtually any
format, as long as it is not compressed. When you select the file, Audacity will look through it and try to guess its format.
It will guess correctly about 90% of the time, so you can try just
pressing "OK" and listening to it. If it is not correct, however,
you can use the dialog presented to try all of the different
possibilities.
At the beginning of your imported track(s), you may notice a little
bit of noise. This is probably the file's header, which Audacity
was not able to parse. Just zoom in and select the noise with the
Selection Tool, and then
choose Delete.
Opens a dialog allowing you to edit the ID3 tags associated with
a project, for MP3 exporting.
ID3 Tags are used to store the Title, Artist, Author, and other
information in MP3 files. When you import an MP3 file,
Audacity remembers this information and stores it with your
project. When you export an MP3 file, Audacity will prompt
you for the ID3 tags, showing you any tags it collected from
an original MP3 file, or that you typed by selecting
"Edit ID3 Tags" from the Project menu.
Audacity allows you to store ID3 tags in either the ID3v1 or
the ID3v2 format. In general, you should use the ID3v2 format,
because ID3v2 tags go at the beginning of an MP3 file,
whereas ID3v1 tags go at the end. Having the title and author
first means that someone downloading an MP3 you created will
know that information before they've finished downloading the
song.
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This command mixes all of the selected tracks down to one or two
tracks. The channel of a track being mixed affects whether it
will be mixed into the left channel of the resulting track(s),
the right channel, or both (mono).
For example, if you have
four tracks:
- Track 1: left channel
- Track 2: left channel
- Track 3: right channel
- Track 4: mono channel
and you select them all and perform a Quick Mix, you will end up
with two tracks: the first will contain a mix of tracks 1, 2, and 4
(the new left channel) and the other will contain a mix of tracks
3 and 4 (the new right channel).
Your tracks are implicitly mixed whenever you hit the
Play button and whenever you select
Export.
Note that if you try to mix two very loud tracks together, you may
get clipping (it will sound like pops, clicks, and noise). To avoid
this, you should first use the Amplify... command to reduce the amplitude
of all of your tracks. A future version of Audacity will do automatic
gain control and calculate the optimal amplitude for you.
If you select multiple tracks, this command adjusts their time offset
so that they start at the same time. It adjusts their starting time
to the average of all of the tracks' original starting times.
To adjust the time offset of a track, use the
Time Shift tool.
If you select multiple tracks, this command resets their time offset
to zero. To adjust the time offset of a track, use the
Time Shift tool.
This creates a new empty audio track. This command is rarely needed,
since importing, recording, and mixing automatically create new tracks
as needed. But you can use this to cut or copy data from an existing
track and paste it into a blank track.
This creates a new Label track, which can be very useful for
textual annotation. See the discussion on
Label tracks for more information
on how to use label tracks.
This command removes the selected track or tracks from the project.
Even if only part of a track is selected, the entire track is removed.
You can also delete a track by clicking the X in its upper-left corner.
To cut out only part of the audio in a track, use
Delete or
Silence.
This menu item lets you create a new label at the current selection.
You can title the label by typing with the keyboard and then hitting "Enter"
when you're done. The label saves your current selection - so when you click
on the label later it will return the selection to the state it was in when
you created the label.
See the discussion on
Label tracks for more information
on how to use label tracks.
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