Program similar to sound forge


















Come for the solution, stay for everything else. Welcome to our community! Hi, I need to find a program that is free that can do some things like sound forge, since I dont have the full version of sound forge. I don't need all the fancy features like in sound fordge. I just a need a free program that will let me save the song file in smaller size mp3 etc and crop.. Join our community to see this answer! Unlock 1 Answer and 3 Comments. Andrew Hancock - VMware vExpert.

See if this solution works for you by signing up for a 7 day free trial. More of what Audacity can do include a long list of editing tools. You're able to cut, copy, paste, splice and mix sounds together. Changing the pitch of your voice or other recording has never been easier; Audacity has an unlimited undo and redo history, making it extremely easy to correct mistakes. This application is also a pro at editing very large files such as recordings over several hours.

Among some of the effects Audacity can apply to your sound files: you can remove static and hiss noises, alter the frequencies and apply equalization. The adjustment tools can change the volumes with the compressor, amplify and normalize effects. In addition to the many effects and tools already built-in to Audacity, the developers have also opened the program up to plug-ins which are freely available across the Internet.

Its main advantage to Jon Hopkins is probably that he knows it well and likes it. I very much enjoyed his latest album controversial statement I know , but what made it good isn't anything that has its own button on any one piece of equipment or software.

A fun fact about him is that he only records at 16bit and doesn't like the sound of 24 bit for his music. Also his latest album was recorded on Logic and not as much Soundforge. And he used its internal plugins a lot. Like said above, his variable recording techniques are not what makes his music interesting or not. Thanks for replying. Im not thinking that his music sounds great because he use SF , I just gave him as an example for someone that use lots of recorded audio and I just wonder if there is any real advantage in dedicated program for audio manipulation.

As I see now , Cubase has lots of function that in SF so it looks like he uses it just because he is used to this program for long time Thanks again. My Studio. I'm not sure you can do this , but you can split stereo channel into 2 mono tracks when importing audio file or when exporting audio file and then you can just hard pan L and R and do separate edits and process.

I just gave him as an example for someone that use lots of recorded audio and I just wonder if there is any real advantage in dedicated program for audio manipulation. I think there's a lot to be said for a dedicated tool for each part of the process. A project I am beginning now will be recorded on digital HD multitrack, arranged and "written" in Ableton, and finally mixed in Harrison Mixbus.

I could do the whole thing in any one of them but they each have their strengths in the area I intend to use them. I use Audition, and wish I could use Ableton for everything, but I thing ableton may be more limited for audio editing than Cubase. Maybe less. The DAW developers will never care about the sound editor like dedicated sound editor developers do.

MS Word might have a few tools to crop, change brightness, or rotate the images in your document, but it will never approach Photoshop. Even simple stuff like how the cursor and selection works, how zoom works, or how the waves are displayed.



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