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Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full
Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full







sony sound forge pro 10.0 full
  1. #Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full archive#
  2. #Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full full#
  3. #Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full windows#

Sony have complemented the event‑based editing with additional tools for creating full CD projects and burning a Disc‑At‑Once CD (the existing Track‑At‑Once burning option is still available). It can, of course, also be used to arrange a series of individual songs into a CD‑like sequence, just like Wavelab's Audio Montage.

sony sound forge pro 10.0 full

With music, provided you can create suitably transparent edit points, you might use it to rearrange the verse/chorus structure of a stereo mix. For example, when working with dialogue, you might simply wish to adjust the timing between individual phrases. In short, the process is almost identical to working with similar audio events on an audio track in most modern DAWs, and the possible applications are similar.

#Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full windows#

New events can be copied and pasted from other data windows, while complete files can be dragged and dropped from the Windows Explorer into an existing data window. Events can be made longer or shorter by dragging their boundaries, and they can also be overlapped, with crossfades automatically generated from a large number presets that would accommodate most situations. A new Event tool The new Event Tool (second from right) provides considerable extra functionality., with a waveform and pointing finger icon, allows you to create split points to divide your waveform into different sections (events), and to move these independently along the data window's timeline.

sony sound forge pro 10.0 full

It has always been possible to copy, cut and paste chunks of a waveform within a Sound Forge session, but event‑based editing makes that whole process much more flexible. Amongst the other new features, customisable window layouts and a number of new processing options also stand out. As part of the set of tools that allows this to happen, Sony have also introduced what they term 'event editing', allowing multiple waveform 'events' to be placed within a single data window. Potentially, at least, this might now change, as the new release introduces Disc‑At‑Once CD burning: for me, at least, the clear highlight of version 10. At the time, Sound Forge 9 remained my weapon of choice for stereo editing, but when it came to CD compilation, I generally turned to Wavelab's Audio Montage options. In terms of core editing functionality and appearance, Sony have, thankfully, left well alone since version 9.

#Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full archive#

If you are new to Sound Forge, the SOS web site review archive is the place to start, and I'll concentrate here upon the key new features introduced in this release. SOS has reviewed many previous incarnations of Sound Forge, most recently version 9 in the June 2007 issue (on‑line at /sos/jun07/articles/soundforge9.htm).

sony sound forge pro 10.0 full

What else has been added to tempt potential purchasers? Forging Ahead Sony have now released version 10 of Sound Forge, adding 'Pro' to the title. All provide excellent editing environments for mono, stereo or multi‑channel audio. Sony's heavyweight audio production package celebrates reaching double figures with the addition of DAW‑style 'event editing' and CD compilation.įor a long time now, three packages have dominated the market for audio editing on the Windows platform: Adobe's Audition, Steinberg's Wavelab and Sony's Sound Forge.









Sony sound forge pro 10.0 full