Announcement: Our new CyberLink Feedback Forum has arrived! Please transfer to our new forum to provide your feedback or to start a new discussion. The content on this CyberLink Community forum is now read only, but will continue to be available as a user resource. Thanks!
CyberLink Community Forum
where the experts meet
| Advanced Search >
Audio ducking disappointing
Loe [Avatar]
Newbie Joined: Nov 25, 2010 10:27 Messages: 29 Offline
[Post New]
I expected more from the Audio Ducking feature.

I dont narrate my videos but when the clip sound is uninteresting I do provide a music or sound effects sound track.

what I expected from Audio Ducking was that after I adjusted my video track volumes, then adding a music

sound track, that audio ducking would then take account of the gains and drops of the clip sound track.

It doesnt. Only seems to react to narration?

unless i am using it wrong, this feature doesnt add anything for me.

Very disappointing.
PowerDirector Moderator [Avatar]
Senior Contributor Location: New Taipei City, Taiwan Joined: Oct 18, 2016 00:25 Messages: 2104 Offline
[Post New]
Hi,

Anything I have seen relating to Audio Ducking references only "...narration and voice overs..." and similar.

The tutorial here:

https://www.cyberlink.com/learning/video/824/using-audio-ducking-to-balance-voice-overs-and-background-music-in-powerdirector-16

indicates that:

"Audio Ducking is a powerful new feature in PowerDirector 16. Audio Ducking can automatically optimize the audio mix in videos that contain dialogue or narration by fading backing music tracks so that speech can be clearly heard."

The product FAQ here:

https://www.cyberlink.com/support/product-faq-content.do?id=20821&prodId=4&prodVerId=1299&CategoryId=-1&keyword=

also says :

"The Audio Ducking feature helps you to make dialogue or voice overs be heard more clearly by automatically lowering the volume of background music or other audio."

Your experience seems to confirm that.

Cheers

PowerDirector Moderator

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Oct 03. 2017 17:12


For customer support related issues, please contact:
- Customer service: https://membership.cyberlink.com/support/customer-services.do
- Technical support: https://membership.cyberlink.com/support/service/technical-support.do
Loe [Avatar]
Newbie Joined: Nov 25, 2010 10:27 Messages: 29 Offline
[Post New]
Quote Hi,

Anything I have seen relating to Audio Ducking references only "...narration and voice overs..." and similar.

The tutorial here:

https://www.cyberlink.com/learning/video/824/using-audio-ducking-to-balance-voice-overs-and-background-music-in-powerdirector-16

indicates that:

"Audio Ducking is a powerful new feature in PowerDirector 16. Audio Ducking can automatically optimize the audio mix in videos that contain dialogue or narration by fading backing music tracks so that speech can be clearly heard."

The product FAQ here:

https://www.cyberlink.com/support/product-faq-content.do?id=20821&prodId=4&prodVerId=1299&CategoryId=-1&keyword=

also says :

"The Audio Ducking feature helps you to make dialogue or voice overs be heard more clearly by automatically lowering the volume of background music or other audio."

Your experience seems to confirm that.

Cheers

PowerDirector Moderator




yes, what a missed opportunity. My guess is that most users will not as a matter of course narrate their videos

but instead use it as I do. Makes this Audio Ducking quite useless. Shame. It was one of the main reasons I upgraded.

Not much else new really.
Loe [Avatar]
Newbie Joined: Nov 25, 2010 10:27 Messages: 29 Offline
[Post New]
There is a way !

If like me you dont narrate but now and again lower the soundtrack of the actual video clip and then have a separate

possibly music sound track underneath, I have found the way to make Audio Ducking respond not just to voice narration but also to clip sound track.

The key to it all is that Audio Ducking doesnt so much response to the volume of the narration rather to the presence of it.

This you can use. Say you have a video clip where you, in places, want the sound to 'go down' a thus the music to 'come up'.

You can make audio ducking respond to this as follows:

at the point where you have lowered the volume of the video clip completely, insert a clip split. Where you want the clip sound to come back insert another clip split. Now MUTE the bit inbetween the splits.

If you now add a music track and apply Audio Ducking you will find that the music comes up where the video clip is muted and goes down where it isnt.

This is a partial solution of course, If you just want to reduce the video sound a bit rather than mute completely, then this wont work. It only works where you mute a clip. but its not a bad half way. As adding music or additional sound is the last thing I usually do, it will still save time and a lot of messing about. But Cyberlink please sort this out. Audio ducking needs to be more sophisticated and react to volume also.
Powered by JForum 2.1.8 © JForum Team