All tagged Mamoworld

Mamoworld: Cut and Edit Music in Premiere Pro Accurately

In this tutorial you learn how you can edit music in Premiere Pro very easily to fit to your video. Typically each song consists of different sections that are more or less intense or have other variations and I show you how to separate those sections accurately such that you can change their order, remove or duplicate sections and so on such that at each point in time the mood of the music fits to your video perfectly. —Mamoworld

Justin Odisho: How to Sync Cut Footage to Music in Adobe Premiere Pro CC

Learn how to edit your video to the rhythm of a music track in this Premiere Pro tutorial by Justin Odisho. First, at 1:15 Justin identifies beats in the audio waveform, and then cuts his video clips to sync using the razor tool. (You can also lock the music track and use keyboard shortcuts Q and W to Ripple Trim Edit to Playhead.) Alternatively, BeatEdit for Premiere Pro by Mamoworld will analyze your music track and add markers to beats. Then, with Snapping (S) enabled, you can easily edit your footage to the markers with 100% precision. At 2:27 Justin suggests using onscreen text and fades to stylize your syncopated edits.

In this video editing tutorial, I will be using Adobe Premiere pro CC 2017 to demonstrate how to Sync Jump Cut your footage with music to create a more cinematic feeling sequence or transition from clip to clip and set the pace of your project! —Justin Odisho

Source: https://youtu.be/-2eXk0oLFQs

BeatMatching - Adobe Premiere Pro CC Tutorial for Better Audio Transitions

In this tutorial, Mathais Möhl of Mamoworld demonstrates how BeatEdit can be used for tempo matching in Premiere Pro with the help of Adobe Audition. BeatEdit analyzes music tracks and applies clip markers to beats, These markers can be used to accurately retime tempo to seamlessly transition from one music track to another. Retiming is done in Adobe Audition for higher quality results, i.e. no monster or chipmunk effect.

In this Premiere Pro tutorial you learn how to adjust the tempo of one song to match the tempo of another one in order to create a smooth transition between them. —Mathais Möhl