The spectral view showing the frequencies is the orange background and the standard amplitude view is the blue foreground. Lower frequencies are at bottom of the window and zones where specific frequencies have more amplitude are in brighter orange.
With traditional audio editing, when a time region is selected, any edit is applied to all frequencies. With spectral editing, specific frequencies can be edited, for instance cut or boosted, without affecting the other ones that are at the same time. But of course the overall level of the processed region will change accordingly.
Here, I am using iZotope RX Advanced audio editor but there are others too that have spectral editing capabilities.
The sample is from my Patreon Reward sample pack #38.
https://youtu.be/WOCktTvIgwE
With traditional audio editing, when a time region is selected, any edit is applied to all frequencies. With spectral editing, specific frequencies can be edited, for instance cut or boosted, without affecting the other ones that are at the same time. But of course the overall level of the processed region will change accordingly.
Here, I am using iZotope RX Advanced audio editor but there are others too that have spectral editing capabilities.
The sample is from my Patreon Reward sample pack #38.
https://youtu.be/WOCktTvIgwE
Statistics: Posted by zvon — Fri Apr 26, 2024 2:01 am