3.0
Table Of Contents
- Copyright
- Support
- Serial number
- More about MAGIX
- Introduction
- Overview of the program screen
- Track window and constant control elements
- Import
- Editing in the track view
- What is an object?
- Project
- Adjust object volume
- Fading objects in and out
- Duplicate objects
- Reducing and increasing the length of objects
- Deleting and moving objects
- Cut objects
- Fading objects
- Change song order
- Automatic insertion of pauses between objects
- Several songs in a single long object
- Draw volume curves
- Quick zoom
- Cleaning
- Mastering
- Sound Effects
- Export
- File menu
- Edit menu
- Effects menu
- CD/DVD menu
- Set track marker
- Set Pause marker
- Set track markers automatically
- Set track marker to object edges
- Split objects at marker positions
- Set auto pause length
- Delete marker
- Delete all markers
- Create CD...
- Show CD-R drive information
- Show CD-R disc information
- CD track list/ID3 editor
- Get CD track information (freedb)
- CD info options
- Get CD Track list online
- Audio ID
- Options menu
- Move mouse mode
- Cut Mouse mode
- Zoom mode
- Delete Mouse mode
- Resampling/Timestretch mode
- Draw volume mode
- Stereo display
- Activate Volume Curves
- Play parameter
- Video window
- Units of measurement
- Mouse Grid Active
- Auto crossfade mode active
- Display values scale
- Options for automatic track marker recognition
- Path settings
- Tasks menu
- Help menu
- Tips and tricks
- Keyboard layout and mouse-wheel support
- Problems & solutions
Features
Cleaning
Remove unpleasant noise in your recordings and enrich the overall sound. To do this, there are
numerous professional tools available like the "De-clipper", "De-noiser
", and "De-hisser".
So that your recordings sound optimal, a series of mastering tools are available to you once you have
cleaned up the audio
.
You can also add a number of sound effects to your music. Resampling and timestretching help adjust the
speed and pitch of pieces so that they match, and reverb/echo adds professional reverb to your music.
Automatic Volume Adjustment
The problem with compilation CDs: The songs of different artists usually have different volume levels
because they were produced differently. A balanced compilation CD therefore needs volume adjustment
so that the volume doesn't need to be turned up or down for each song. Previously, each track had to be
adjusted by hand, but now MAGIX Music Editor 3 does it automatically.
There are two functions: The Leveler in MultiMax compresses the entire material into one uniform
volume. The function "Loudness adjustment" analyzes the actual "loudness" of all songs perceived by the
listener and adapts them to one another without changing the inner dynamics of the songs.
Volume automation curves
Use the "Volume" button to activate a volume curve. You can use it to draw volume curves onto your
audio
material, for instance, for compensating fluctuations while recording or increasing the volume of quiet
passages.
Video sound post-editing
MAGIX Music Editor 3 can also edit video sounds as well as the music. Here, the audio
track can be extracted and inserted automatically at a precise point in the video once the editing is
finished.
Burn CD
An Audio CD can be burned from the most varying of audio sources which can then be played on any
Audio CD player. For this to work, the audio material has to be loaded into MAGIX Music Editor 3,
further intermediary steps are not required. In general, MP3 songs first have to be converted into WAV
files in order to burn them onto an Audio CD in a second step. MAGIX Music Editor 3 does all this "on
the fly".
The CD will sound exactly the same as the audio
material on playback in the master track.
Export
Of course, you can also export your recordings. There is a wide range of formats
available which enable you to enjoy your recordings anywhere you like.
Supported formats
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