Poll

Did this help you?

1/10
7 (13.7%)
2/10
0 (0%)
3/10
0 (0%)
4/10
0 (0%)
5/10
2 (3.9%)
6/10
0 (0%)
7/10
0 (0%)
8/10
1 (2%)
9/10
1 (2%)
10/10
7 (13.7%)
Sticky please
33 (64.7%)

Total Members Voted: 51

Author Topic: Spectrum's Looping Tutorial [Audacity Method] / Help Topic  (Read 9817 times)

When I press Delete on my keyboard (I'm using a laptop) to trim/delete parts of a song, nothing happens. Is it Audacity being bugged, or is it the keybinding?

Ah, I found out why. Thanks for tutorila, Speccy. You're the best.
« Last Edit: April 13, 2012, 08:54:39 AM by Måster Blåster »

I have made some quality music because of this.


Add to OP that the song/sound needs to be played first in order to trim it.

This didnt help me at all you fail.

nvm
« Last Edit: May 05, 2012, 02:31:43 PM by Kevso11 »

This didnt help me at all you fail.

nvm
If you can't figure out yourself with this topic, you're a major handicap.

Just so you know getting Audio from Youtube is Very much Illegal

Just so you know getting Audio from Youtube is Very much Illegal

wtf handicap

My rushed, short variant

1. Load up music and find the parts you want looped
2. CRTL X them (ISOLATE them)
3. Set the base to -6 or so to make it not sound horrible in game.
4. Split to mono
5. Export as OGG VORBIS and name it something_something_some, not something something some

My rushed, short variant

1. Load up music and find the parts you want looped
2. CRTL X them (ISOLATE them)
3. Set the base to -6 or so to make it not sound horrible in game.
4. Split to mono
5. Export as OGG VORBIS and name it something_something_some, not something something some


Yep, but -6 is a bit quiet. -3 is comfortable

This tutorial is what got me inspired to make all this.

This should get bumped for others and it helped.

I had to learn all of this the hard way...wish i would have seen this before i started making music

I had to learn all of this the hard way...wish i would have seen this before i started making music
Hah, yeah