It is my distinct pleasure to announce that Remix, a favorite feature in Audition for several years, is now available in Premiere Pro (Beta) builds.
Remix is a feature powered by Adobe Sensei that quickly and smoothly re-arranges any musical composition to a new duration, saving hours of cutting, rippling, adding fades, previewing, then undoing and starting again, trying to cut a piece of music to fit the length of a scene. Whether your music clips come from a favorite stock audio service like Adobe Stock, your personal or commercial libraries, or even your neighbor's garage band, Remix will find the ideal cut points or loops, contracting or extending the length of your songs almost instantly.
How does Remix work? Great question. When you first enable a clip, Remix takes a few seconds to perform an analysis measuring several qualities of each beat in a song and comparing them to every other beat. When you specify a new target duration, Remix finds the path of highest confidence based on those qualities, to create a musically coherent and seamless remix of the song, adding the cuts and crossfades under the hood.
How do I get started using Remix? I'm so glad that you asked. There are a few ways to get started:
In the Clip menu, or by right-clicking on a music clip in your timeline, select Remix > Enable Remix
or, in the Essential Sound Panel, with your clip selected in the timeline, tag the clip as Music audio type and select Duration > Remix
or, click and hold in the Ripple Edit tool group in the Toolbar panel, select Remix Tool, then click and drag the right edge of your music clip in the timeline.
If you know the duration that you're trying to achieve, you can type this in the Target Duration text in the Essential Sound panel Remix Properties. You can also use the Remix tool to drag the length of the music clip to visually match your content. Depending on factors like the original tempo and composition of the song, and the other parameters we'll touch on next, Remix will find a version of the song within 5 seconds of the target duration, and usually within 1 second.
There are two additional parameters you can adjust to explore variations: Edit Length and Features. When performing a remix, the feature may cut out one or more segments, or loop existing regions, and adds a small crossfade over the edit point. A longer Edit Length will result in as few cuts as possible, while a shorter value will increase the number of cuts allowing for many smaller segments. For dynamic compositions that might change style or intensity over the course of the song, a short Edit Length gives Remix the most flexibility to find a musically cohesive mix, while a longer Edit Length will retain as much of the original composition as possible, limiting any cuts. Features adds weighting to Remix's decision-making process, allowing it to favor Harmonic transitions which are ideal for chorale or orchestral style music, or transitions based on Timbre characteristics, which tend to work better for songs with a strong lead instrument or vocals. Because Remixes are nearly instantaneous after the initial analysis, feel free to explore as many variations as you like!
How do I know if Remix worked? Use your eyes and ears! Every edit Remix makes is displayed as a vertical zig-zag line on the new audio clip. Move your playhead a little before these indicators and press Play. You'll hear the new edit in real-time and can judge for yourself how well it performed. You can also double click the clip to open the remixed song in the Source Monitor and listen to it in isolation.
Are there any other secrets you want to impart about Remix? Well, you didn't hear it from me, but Remix always keeps the beginning and ending of your clip and remixes the middle. If there is a certain part of the song you really want to happen at a particular point in your project, split the original clip right at this point and Remix both clips separately. Butting them together will make a seamless transition between the two, and you can align this point with your video. Remix loves songs with vocals, but doesn't have a clue what they're saying. Sometimes, this means Remix will keep the first few lines from one verse, and edit them into the last few lines of a different verse. This can be weird if you're trying to sing along, but most of the time, you won't even notice. It's THAT good.
Please give Remix a try in the Premiere Pro (Beta) release today and share your feedback below.
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