Author's note: This article was originally posted at Medium.com, so if you have a Medium account you can read it there along with the comments and maybe follow me if you are interested in this kind of articles. Here's the link. So you managed to get the best sound out of your simple podcasting setup by preparing well for your recording session. So what now?
You fire up google and search for ‘how to edit and mix podcast’. What you get is a bunch of alien terms you have never heard before. Normalize, envelope automations, noise gate, transient designer. It can be overwhelming. I would have liked to tell you that those are just fancy words and everything is actually quite easy, but no, it takes some time and effort to learn mixing and audio engineering. I will however offer in this article the most accessible way for you to have a decent mix on your podcast episode.
0 Comments
I wrote an article about the simplest workflow in achieving a studio quality mix and edit for your podcast. In it, I listed EQ and compression as the most important audio effects you need to learn. But I realized that a discussion on those two would require a wordcount that is equal to a moderate-length article so I decided to write this separately.
|
AuthorMy name is Drew. I'm an audio engineer by trade. This is my portfolio and blog site. I write audio articles here and at Medium. You can check out my portfolio over here. Archives
April 2019
Categories |