Chorus Effect - Adobe 25520388 - Premiere Pro - PC Using Manual

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USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO
Effects and transitions
Bandpass effect
The Bandpass effect removes frequencies that occur outside the specified range, or band of frequencies. This effect is
available for 5.1, stereo, or mono clips.
Specifies the frequency at the center of the specified range.
Center
Specifies the width of the frequency band to preserve. Low settings create a wide range of frequencies, and high
Q
settings create a narrow band of frequencies.
Bass effect
The Bass effect lets you increase or decrease lower frequencies (200 Hz and below). Boost specifies the number of
decibels by which to increase the lower frequencies. This effect is available for 5.1, stereo, or mono clips.
Channel Volume effect
The Channel Volume effect lets you independently control the volume of each channel in a stereo or 5.1 clip or track.
Each channel's level is measured in decibels.
More Help topics
"Normalize one or more
clips" on page 235
"Normalize the Master
track" on page 236

Chorus effect

The Chorus effect simulates several voices or instruments played at once by adding multiple short delays with a small
amount of feedback. The result is lush, rich sound. You can use the Chorus effect to enhance a vocal track or add stereo
spaciousness to mono audio. You can also use it to create unique special effects.
Premiere Pro uses a direct-simulation method of achieving a chorus effect, making each voice (or layer) sound distinct
from the original by slightly varying timing, intonation, and vibrato. The Feedback setting adds extra detail to the
result.
To achieve the best results with mono files, convert them to stereo before applying the Chorus effect.
Keyframeable option that specifies whether to apply or bypass the Chorus effect.
Bypass
Opens a mixer-style control panel that controls the properties with knobs.
Custom Setup
Opens a set of parameter controls for the Chorus effect.
Individual Parameters
Specifies wave type of Low Frequency Oscillator: Sin(e), Rect(angle), or Tri(angle).
LfoType
Determines the maximum rate at which amplitude changes occur. With very low values, the resulting voice
Rate
slowly gets louder and quieter, like a singer that cannot keep his or her breath steady. With very high settings, the result
can be jittery and unnatural.
Very high settings can produce interesting special effects (as in the Another Dimension preset).
Determines the maximum variation in amplitude that occurs. For example, you can alter the amplitude of
Depth
a chorused voice so that it is 5 dB louder or quieter than the original. At extremely low settings (less than 1 dB), the
depth may be unnoticeable unless the Modulation Rate is set extremely high. At extremely high settings, however, the
sound may cut in and out, creating an objectionable warble. Natural vibratos occur around 2 dB to 5 dB. Note that this
setting is a maximum only; the vibrato volume might not always go as low as the setting indicates. This limitation is
intentional, as it creates a more natural sound.
Last updated 1/16/2012
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