Adobe Audition started life as a simple audio editor called Cool Edit Pro until Adobe saw that the big money was in music creation software. Adobe Audition has been available on Windows for many years now as a multi-track recording studio that offers all the refinement you expect in Adobe products but may leave beginners floundering in technical jargon.
However, only now has it arrived on Mac but it has been completely re-written to provide cross-platform functionality and modernize it to increase native support for multicore processors and new hardware. Adobe Audition's interface is clean. Each window is separated by tabs to keep the File, Effects, Main and Mixer sections separate and easy to revert to.
If you don’t like the layout then Adobe has provided an Unlock Panel option which allows you to detach and move these windows to a position of your choosing. You can save your own rearrangements as workplace templates according to the type of project you are working on. To really get the most out of Adobe Audition, you’ll need a pretty good sound card.
For those concerned with MIDI support, Adobe Audition doesn’t offer a great deal in this area and many users report this as one of the most confusing aspects of the program to configure. To describe all the editing possibilities of Adobe Audition would involve going into the minute technicalities of audio composition and compression but there are four main modes to get to grips with.
The first is Waveform Display which displays the wave in graphical form. Second is Spectral Frequency Display which graphically displays the frequency range with colors. Logarithmic Display does exactly the same but obviously displays the wave as a Logarithm. For producing stereo-sound, there’s also Spectral Pan Display and Spectral Phase Display which enable you to get stereo sound perfectly synced. The actual editing in Adobe Audition is performed using the time-honored cut and paste functions common to most audio and video editing programs.
You simply mark an in and out point and cut and paste the audio until it’s as you want it. However, the program is much more advanced than this as it’s able to detect beat patterns and rhythms and set in and out points accordingly. To use this function though, you’ll have to spend a long time studying the Help guide (which fortunately is very clear and detailed).
You can also use a relatively new function in the audio editing field called Frequency Space Editing which means you can edit certain frequencies of the sound rather than the wave as a whole. There are also of course a heap of effects that you can apply to sounds ranging from complex distortions to pitch bending specific frequencies. Adobe Audition has been updated with a host of new features.
Pick of the bunch is probably the way Adobe has improved multitrack editing, added new effects and enhanced noise reduction. They've also added phase correction tools plus VSTi virtual instrument support and native 5.1 surround support. The multi-track editing suite has been improved to save time and maintain consistency by grouping clips into a Multitrack View.
From here you can trim and fade much more easily. You can also batch save all audio files applying specific file formats, locations, filename templates, and more. However, some features from Adobe Audition 3 on Windows are missing from this Mac version, namely VSTi support and Spectral Pan and Phase views. Adobe Audition is a very advanced program designed only for those who are serious about multi-track audio production.
If you are looking for a simple sound editor, then this is way too advanced and will only leave you frustrated. If however you want to take your first few steps into professional editing, the extensive Adobe help guide will ensure that you get the most out of this rich and complex program.
Adobe Audition CS6 Compatible With
- Mac OS X
Download Adobe Audition CS6
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