
I’ve been a faithful user of Adobe Audition for over 25 years. I’ve used it to produce radio commercials, record and edit podcast episodes, and enhance audio for video projects.
Audition gives me a level of control over my work that I haven’t found in other audio editors. In the Multitrack View, I can freely move and arrange audio clips to stack voice-overs, music beds, and sound effects exactly the way I want.
I also like that I can apply effects to audio in both the Waveform Editor and the Multitrack View. Adding effects is straightforward: I highlight the audio, choose the effect I want, and hit apply. It’s also helpful that I can preview what the effect will sound like first, especially if I’m considering a different direction.
And when I’m working with other Adobe programs like Premiere Pro or After Effects, the Dynamic Link feature makes it easy to edit and update changes to my Audition files.
I use Audition nearly every day for work projects, whether I’m making small audio tweaks or recording voice-overs. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
Unlike After Effects, Adobe Audition doesn’t let you organize your files into separate folders. It would be extremely helpful to have the option to create folders within a project—for example, dedicated folders for voice-overs, sound effects, sequences, and any other elements you’re working with—so everything stays organized while you build a project. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
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