![]() ![]() ![]() A concave fade is an ideal choice here, because it gets rid of the most objectionable part of the pop but still leaves in the “p” sound. Dragging the Fade In button up or down alters the fade’s shape (up for convex, down for concave). You can see the fade attenuating the spike. Click the small, square Fade In button in the upper-left corner and drag to the right.Note the spike at the beginning that corresponds to the “pop.” The keyboard shortcut to do this is Ctrl+left arrow (Command+left arrow). Zoom in and move the playhead to the start of the file.Choose File > Open, navigate to the Lesson03 folder, and open the file PPop.wav. ![]() Audition has advanced techniques for removing noise and doing audio restoration, but for simple problems, a fade is often all you need. Other unintended noises can also occur, like “p-pops” (a “popping” sound that happens from the sudden burst of air associated with plosive sounds like “b” or “p”), clicks, mouth noises, and so on. Fading regions to reduce artifacts Fading regions to reduce artifactsĪudio may have unintended noises, such as hum or hiss, that are masked when audio like narration is playing but are audible when the narration stops. ![]()
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