![]() You would need the video visible all the time, the video also comes with some dialogue, maybe even temp music, so you don't want to toss it out, but you still need the option to mute it sometimes and you don't want the video to go away either. Other times, you may want to separate audio and video but keep both, for example, you may be scoring a film. ![]() Still, it's probably the best way to do it if you are working with a single video and you do this one per project! You need to open this window again and do it again. The downside is that, as if it wasn't hidden enough, this method can't be done via an action, can't be scripted for (AFAIK) and it's also not undoable, meaning that you can't press Cmd+Z and get your audio back once you do this. This is great, because by ignoring the audio, you are allocating no resources to it, and also the look of your item changes into a block which is good to try and identify video tracks. Somewhere in 2003 there's an Xzibit meme on this type of thing!Īlternatively you can just press Cmd+F2 to open the elusive source media properties, and there you can tick the box called 'ignore audio'. Yes! It's the properties for the media item properties. You would need to go to item properties, and then from there look for the submenu 'Properties.' and open that. For starters, there's no action for it in the action list, no sign of it in the right click menus, and it is also, literally hidden two menus deep from your item. Method 2: Ignore Audio: This is a great option but it's quite well hidden and few people know about it. By the same vain, you can also just bring the fader all the way to zero. At the very least, REAPER is using a non-zero amount of resources to have a meter for the track work in real-time. the downside is, you haven't actually disabled the audio. Audio won't get to the master track, but the video will still make it there. Method 1: Disabling Master Parent Send: One way to not hear the audio but still see the video is to make a track dedicated to your videos on your project and simply disable its master parent send. I'll show you how to do that first, before I show you my custom action that makes the whole thing faster.įirst let's look at ways of just stripping the audio track from a video item So for all these reasons, you may want to split your file into a video and an audio item. If you mute a track with a video item on it, you lose the video too. ![]() The downside is, what if you want to re-design the sound for a video? What if you did a bunch of recordings and filmed it and now you don't want the sound from your camera's built-in mic. While most other DAWs have a dedicated Video track, REAPER just lets you put video item anywhere and in any quantity, which is awesome. REAPER is awesome in that it lets us import all kinds of different media and lets them mix and mingle on the same track. This episode is about another Frequently Asked Questions I see on the forums: How do I separate the audio tracks from my video item? Separate audio from a video item with one action! (Rapid fire REAPER Tutorials Ep83)
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