Need help merging the final audio and video together!
I am relatively new to producing videos and would like to know how other people merge their video and audio into a file that YouTube will accept, and my clients can play themselves?
With the method I've been using (below), the audio cannot be AAC, which means they don't play on Apple devices. Right now I have a client urgently wanting to see her video, but I can't find any way to show it to her because she uses Apple devices.
Here's how I am going about merging my audio and video - please tell me if you know a better way!
1. In Adobe Media Encoder, render the video as h.264
2. In Premiere Pro, output a WAV using the "Waveform Audio" setting (can't find any way to do this in AMC).
3. Go into my audio workstation, import the WAV file (containing the dialog and sound effects), begin working on my soundtrack. (I'm a musician.)
4. Arrange, mix, and master the soundtrack and dialog.
5. Export the audio as a 48k WAV.
6. Merge together the h.264 video and WAV audio using the program "MKV Merge". This result is a .mkv file that plays perfectly on my computer but YouTube will not accept and not everyone can view.
7. Use the program VLC to wrap the video into an mp4 container.
However, the two problems I have with VLC are:
1. I can't give it a video containing AAC audio, because the resulting video always has out-of-sync audio!
2. If I get VLC to encode the audio itself, all of the codec options (including AAC) result in silence. The only option that works is MPEG Audio. These files play fine on my machine, but not for Apple users.
I've struggled with this alone for weeks now, but I need help from video professionals. I'm hoping someone out there can advise me? It would be so nice just to have some program that would merge together h.264 video and AAC audio into a YouTube-ready file?
I've looked for a solution online and found nothing. Someone suggested using a program called Handbrake, but when I tried using Handbrake, it RE-ENCODED my video!! I would not touch any program that thinks it's acceptable to re-encode a lossy format. That's just crazy.
Note that I also use Premiere Pro, so I've posted the same question on the Premiere Pro forum too. Not wishing to spam, but I wasn't sure which forum was the best one as I use both equally.
