Student Multimedia Studio
Audacity Basics Tutorial
1. Create a new project
Open Audacity then IMMEDIATELY SAVE IT to your Jump Drive before
recording or importing audio!
Recommended: Create a folder on your jump drive for your Audacity project and save it
into that folder. If you don’t do this, your “Project” may not open on another computer
unless you copy both the project file AND the project’s “data” folder to your jump drive.
Warning.... Different versions of Audacity are not compatible with each other.
2. Recording your Voice
Click on the red Record button to begin recording.
to pause the recording. Press it again to continue
Click on the blue Pause button
recording from where you left off.
to stop recording. The cursor will return to its
Click on the yellow Stop button
previous position, before the recording was started.
After you stop recording, before recording again, MUTE the previously recorded audio track(s). Each
time you stop recording then start recording again, a new audio “track” will be created. Remember to
“unmute” tracks to hear them play back!
3. Playback Audio
Click on the green Play button at the top and you will hear the file you have just
recorded or imported.
NOTE 1: The audio will playback from the position of the playback head. You might
either have to:
1. Click on the “Skip to Start” button on the toolbar to return the playback head
to the beginning of the project or,
2. Use the “Selection Tool” to position the playback head at the position where
you want to start playing the audio.
NOTE 2: You can playback just one audio track by selecting the “Solo” button on a
track.
NOTE 3: Any time you can’t do anything. Hit the “Stop” button then try again.
4. Importing an Audio File
• Simply drag and drop the audio file in to the Audacity window. Or….
• Select Import Audio ... in the Project menu.
NOTE: Version 1.2.6 CAN NOT import WMA (Windows Media Audio) files. If you have a
WMA file, you can download and use the free Jodix WMA to MP3 converter to convert
it. Download site: http://www.wma-mp3.org/
5. Moving audio clips to another position on the timeline
Select the Time Shift Tool . It is used to move an audio clip to the left or right on its
track.
6. Splitting a clip for editing
First we've got to select a portion of an audio clip on a single track using the Selection
Tool
In the example below, we have a small sentence of speech, where the speaker made a
pause after the first word. We'd like to eliminate that pause.
The part after the pause is selected as shown (darker gray area):
Select the area you want to “split”. Just
click/drag over the area
Now, use the Split Function (Edit > Split) to
remove the selection area from the original track
and move it to a new track as shown below:
Now use the Time Shift Tool to grab the
bottom audio clip and move it to the left as shown
below:
When you play back both tracks, the audio now
doesn’t have as long a pause.
7. Use the Envelope Tool to fade audio volume down/up in the middle of
a clip.
Note: If you want to fade the volume of a clip at the beginning or end, just use the selection
tool to select the area of the clip where you want a fade then choose the fade in or fade out
filter to apply the “fade” to the selected area.
Creating “Keyframes” to control the audio levels
1. Switch to the envelope tool
2. Click on the audio file to create a “keyframe” and “lock” the volume of the audio
track at its existing volume level
3. Click to the right of the first keyframe to create a 2nd Keyframe then drag down to
reduce the volume level.
4. Click again to the right of the second keyframe to create a 3rd keyframe that will
lock the volume to the level of the 2nd keyframe
5. Finally, click to the right of the 3rd keyframe to create a 4th keyframe then drag the
envelope to up to increase the volume level.
An example of an audio clip that fades down then up, then down, then up, etc.:
2nd 3rd
Keyframe Keyframe
1st 4th
Keyframe Keyframe
8. Exporting your finished “Audio” as an MP3
NOTE: Unless you installed the LAME MP3 encoder, Audacity will only allow you to export WAV
format audio files. See the SMS Tutorial, Downloading and Installing Audacity, for instructions
about installing and activating the Lame MP3 encoder.
Just click on FILE > Export As MP3 You should be able to take it from here .
The MP3 file you EXPORT is the file you want to send to your instructor. DO NOT SEND
the Audacity Project file (the one with an .aup extension.