Tutorial : How to reverse a fade-out with Audacity
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May 19, 2014 at 6:51 pm #390437
Since removing fade-outs at the end of songs can be a tedious process, I’m writing this short tutorial to explain how to do it easily and in a few minutes.
First open the file in audacity (obviously ” src=”/wp-content/uploads/invision_emoticons/default_SA_smile.gif” />)
Then, look at the sound wave of the song to see approximatively where the fadeout starts. Here it starts roughly around 3:07
Zoom in :
The red line marks the end of the song (ie there’s no sound after that line even if your audio file is continuing past that point). The yellow line marks the point beyond which it would be extremely difficult to keep the audio if you revert the fade-out, because you’ll need to considerably boost the volume of the audio between the yellow and red lines to do so, hence creating A LOT of background/white noise.
You can discard the audio after that yellow line. In order to do that, you can select the area going from the yellow line to the end of the song, and generate silence on that zone, for instance.
Zoom again :
Looking at the audio peaks, you can clearly see the fadeout starts between 3:08 and 3:09. Select the area going from the start of the fadeout to the newly edited end of the song. Then select “effect” and “adjustable fade”. Choose fade up (since it’s a fade-out, you’ll apply the opposite effect to straighten it). Look at the ending peak and try to roughly evaluate what percentage of the starting peak it represents, and enter that percentage in the “Start (or end)” case (usually between 15 and 35). Leave the “End (or start)” value at 100.
Apply the fade effect and look at the new wave form.
If the wave still have a fade-out form like this, you need to undo (ctrl-z) and redo with a lower value
Obviously, if the wave form is inverted like this, undo and redo with a higher value
If the fade-out is especially tricky, because of its length or its irregularity, you may obtain a curved, banana shaped, waveform, with a prominent middle part. In that case, undo and redo the fade-up with a negative “mid fade adjust”, it should do the trick.
Anyway, once you’re satisfied with the wave form (ie when it’s as regular as possible, like this) you can apply the “amplification” effect on the area to level its volume with the rest of the song (by default it boosts the volume up to the verge of saturation, so you’ll have to decrease it), so you’ll have this
You can know make a proper ending by pasting a drum sample or adding some reverb on a part… whatever you feel like and your audio is good to go !
May 22, 2014 at 8:15 pm #420832Very nice tutorial. Thanks for sharing.
May 23, 2014 at 7:24 am #420863Thank you very much for this.
May 23, 2014 at 12:55 pm #420871I usually just use Reaper’s volume envelope – then you don’t have to go quite so far outside the normal workflow. I’ll post a couple examples this evening.
May 23, 2014 at 1:24 pm #420872I usually just use Reaper’s volume envelope – then you don’t have to go quite so far outside the normal workflow. I’ll post a couple examples this evening.Please do, because for me the envelope only works for subtle fade outs, usual fadeouts are too great to be compensated by the envelope excursion.
May 23, 2014 at 2:16 pm #420876Ditto. I don’t mind using audacity to do it, because I usually mess with the audio when I’m putting the finishing touches of the song and it takes only a few minutes to do, so it doesn’t bother me, but any slight time-saving process is welcome ” src=”/wp-content/uploads/invision_emoticons/default_SA_smile.gif” />
February 10, 2018 at 7:56 am #495247This. Is. Amazing. Thank you!
February 10, 2018 at 11:21 am #495253Thanks! I’ll be trying this as weirdly almost any song I do seems to end with a fade out…
May 16, 2020 at 9:22 pm #511506Since removing fade-outs at the end of songs can be a tedious process, I’m writing this short tutorial to explain how to do it easily and in a few minutes.
First open the file in audacity (obviously ” src=”/wp-content/uploads/invision_emoticons/default_SA_smile.gif” />)
Then, look at the sound wave of the song to see approximatively where the fadeout starts. Here it starts roughly around 3:07
Zoom in :
The red line marks the end of the song (ie there’s no sound after that line even if your audio file is continuing past that point). The yellow line marks the point beyond which it would be extremely difficult to keep the audio if you revert the fade-out, because you’ll need to considerably boost the volume of the audio between the yellow and red lines to do so, hence creating A LOT of background/white noise.
You can discard the audio after that yellow line. In order to do that, you can select the area going from the yellow line to the end of the song, and generate silence on that zone, for instance.
Zoom again :
Looking at the audio peaks, you can clearly see the fadeout starts between 3:08 and 3:09. Select the area going from the start of the fadeout to the newly edited end of the song. Then select “effect” and “adjustable fade”. Choose fade up (since it’s a fade-out, you’ll apply the opposite effect to straighten it). Look at the ending peak and try to roughly evaluate what percentage of the starting peak it represents, and enter that percentage in the “Start (or end)” case (usually between 15 and 35). Leave the “End (or start)” value at 100.
Apply the fade effect and look at the new wave form.
If the wave still have a fade-out form like this, you need to undo (ctrl-z) and redo with a lower value
Obviously, if the wave form is inverted like this, undo and redo with a higher value
If the fade-out is especially tricky, because of its length or its irregularity, you may obtain a curved, banana shaped, waveform, with a prominent middle part. In that case, undo and redo the fade-up with a negative “mid fade adjust”, it should do the trick.
Anyway, once you’re satisfied with the wave form (ie when it’s as regular as possible, like this) you can apply the “amplification” effect on the area to level its volume with the rest of the song (by default it boosts the volume up to the verge of saturation, so you’ll have to decrease it), so you’ll have this
You can know make a proper ending by pasting a drum sample or adding some reverb on a part… whatever you feel like and your audio is good to go !
All of this is extremely vague. This needs more details, because so far, none of these solutions have worked.
May 16, 2020 at 9:56 pm #511508It’s an absolutely perfect write up that was done 6 years ago and has never even needed an edit, I suggest you read a little more, and no need to quote an entire OP
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