

Now, it's going to scan this clip here, click on Scan, and it immediately finds 155 problems. Once you choose your settings, then you just scan it. So Heavy means that you find many things that are wrong, (Default) kind of lightens that load, so we'll go to (Default) here. See this number goes down, the lower the number, the more things it finds.Complexity is that it sort of widens the scope of its search.

If I change it to Heavy Reduction, you'll see these guys slide around. The presets adjust just these two settings here: Threshold and Complexity, right now they're set here, to the (Default),which is kind of a mid-range. But we're dealing with the DeClicker here, so just focus on that.You can choose some Presets, we're going to go with (Default). The DeClipper deals with clipped audio, that is audio that's recorded too loudly, and the top and the bottom of the waveform have been cut off. The drop-down list has these four effects, don't confuse the DeClicker and the DeClipper. It's a little confusing that they're in two different places, but there you go. Opens up the panel here, and in this drop-down list there are those four effects you saw moments ago here inside the Effects group. And to access a panel that you don't see here, you go to Window, that refines the panels and there's the Diagnostics panel. Because it's a diagnostic tool, you open up the Diagnostics panel. And now, we'll find the DeClicker in kind of the normal way.

Remember that, because that is the controller for the DeClicker. I'm not going to click on it just yet, because I want to show you one other way here.ĭown under Noise Reduction / Restoration, there's an Automatic Click Remover.If you open that up, you see this controller here, Threshold and Complexity. I'm going to go to Effects, under Effects, you've got a Diagnostics section and there are four things there, one of which is the DeClicker (process). I'm going to zoom in on it by right-clicking here, dragging it across, tune in in that section.Now, I want to use the DeClicker. So, I'm going to select this area here just to kind of focus our attention on that. So, we're going to start off by using the DeClicker. We want to somehow get rid of that vinyl record static there and the clicks and pops. We're going to focus in this one here where I've got a vinyl record in the background, the kind of thing that you want to use the DeClicker and the Click/Pop Eliminator on, here we go, like this. We're going to start with noises-speech.wav these are the Gettysburg Address segments that I recorded, and put some noise in there with the recordings. We're also going to work with a DeClicker, which is both an effect and a diagnostic tool. In the most recent version of Audition, there is a new effect called the Click/Pop Eliminator, we're going to work on that effect in this lesson.
