Friday 13 May 2011

Audition CS5.5

When the public beta of Audition 4.0 for Mac came out I downloaded it straight away and blogged about my first impressions. Since then I've enjoyed having a version of Audition on my MacBook, and now that the final release has come I've taken advantage of a generous education discount and bought the full version.

I was surprised to see the new version of Audition included in the CS suite, because I thought Soundbooth would stay there and Audition would be on it's own branch. However it does make much more sense to bring Audition in with the other pro apps. Soundbooth has been discontinued, so there's no budget audio editor from Adobe: it's Audition or nothing.

There's not a massive amount more to say. I haven't given it a full work out yet, so can't tell you too much about the functionality. Visually the final release is very similar to the beta; a History palette has been added to the bottom left of the screen, and you can search for help in the top right corner.




There are a couple of other things I've noticed that are different to Audition 3.0, and probably were in the beta too. In the multitrack view you used to be able to drag a clip out of the files panel and move it across to the right hand end of the timeline prompting everything to move left and allowing you to find the end of the previous clip. This was really neat for quickly putting together radio packages and doesn't work in the new version. I also liked the "Autoplay" tick box in the open/import audio file dialogue box that allowed you to preview files by clicking on them which was handy if you had a large directory full of sfx or other files to browse through.*

In the beta there was no "Generate" menu which in 3.0 allowed you to create tones and noise. This is still missing, as is the ability to group clips in the multitrack view.

For a full list of what hasn't made it through from previous versions into Audition CS5.5, or what's been renamed have a look at this page on the Adobe website.

Over the next few days and weeks I'll explore the package further. If you've questions, or things you want trying out (mainly from a broadcast production point of view, I'm not planning on recording an album) then leave a comment and I'll do what I can to help.


*I've just remembered that in OS X you can use Quicklook to get a preview of files in dialogue boxes by clicking on the icon, which is almost as good as Autoplay. How you can replicate that in Windows is another matter.

2 comments:

  1. I seek a private tudor for very basic steps of and trouble solving for Audition CS5.5 for two hours via Skype. Will pay $150.00 U.S. I am using Audition for a scientific application and need just basic operation for inserting multiple files into Multitrack. I have tried and tried but so many problems.

    I am fully versed in Audition 1.5 and have no problems with that application but must use newest version for latest experiments.

    Thanks

    Brian


    brian@trivortex.com

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  2. Hi Brian,

    I'm sorry I can't help you. Audition 1.5 was a simple product and the code was written in a negative or "left spin" direction.

    Fortunately Audition 5.5 has much better positive or "right spin" code which means it's incompatible with pseudo-scientific bollocks. So however long you spend learning it I don't think you'll get much satisfaction.

    Sorry.

    James

    ps: "private tudor" - isn't that one of the Princes in the Tower?

    ReplyDelete