Seamless Looping [Tips, Audacity]

Questions, skill improvement, and respectful critique involving music, sound, and movies.
Post Reply
Message
Author
Alte
The Great Organizer
Posts: 411
Joined: Fri Apr 18, 2014 5:26 pm
Github: nualte
itch: alte
Contact:

Seamless Looping [Tips, Audacity]

#1 Post by Alte »

This thread provides tips on how to make an audio loop with Audacity.
Creating an audio loop

To create an audio loop from an audio track, the first step is to find a suitable section. Ideally the sound will be reasonably constant for as long as possible. Looping is much easier with mono tracks, so if you have a stereo recording but a mono track would be sufficient, the track could first be converted to mono using Tracks > Stereo to Mono .

Image

The start of the selection should match (look like) the end of the selection as closely as possible.
There are items in the View menu that allow jumping from one end of the selection to the other while zoomed in:
  • ■ View > Go to Selection Start ( shortcut is CTRL + [ )
    ■ View > Go to Selection End ( shortcut is CTRL + ] )
To look for appropriate loop points, zoom in horizontally on the start of the selection and then on the end of the selection. To zoom, place the mouse pointer at the selection edge and scroll with the wheel or ball. Drag the selection edges leftwards or rightwards as necessary so as to find loop points that have a similar shape, amplitude and slope so that the end of the loop may flow smoothly into the start of the loop. It may also be useful to zoom in on the vertical scale to left of the waveform, as shown in the following images:

Image
Beginning of the loop selection.

Image
End of the loop selection.

To avoid clicks (glitches) it can often help to use Edit > Find Zero Crossings so as to ensure the start and end of the selection lie accurately on a zero crossing point. In the image below, the sample st the end of the selection (as shown by the dot) is at 0.0 amplitude according to the vertical scale on the left.

Image
Zero crossing point.

The loop may be tested using Loop Play (SHIFT + SPACE).

Using loops in Audacity

If the loop is to be used in Audacity, the selection may be trimmed: CTRL + T. The loop may be repeated using Copy and Paste, though it is usually more convenient to use the Repeat function: Effect > Repeat.

Exporting Loops

The selection may be exported using File > Export Selection.

The lossless PCM WAV format is the best format for loops. Choose "WAV (Microsoft) signed 16-bit PCM" when exporting. Many lossy, size-compressed formats like MP3, WMA and ADPCM WAV suffer from added silence at the the start or end of the file or other issues that do not respect the exact length.

If a lossy compressed audio format is required then OGG Vorbis may be a better choice as it does not suffer from length issues.

==========================================================================================

Note:

I copy & paste this from an article Looping - Audacity Wiki in thread form. The article's content is under Attribution 3.0.
Ren'Py Cookbook Directory

I'm not affiliated with Ren'Py/ itch.io/ Steam/ etc.

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users