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Eric Holtz
Known Participant
March 5, 2017
Question

Exporting A Video with Several Audio Formats: Premiere Pro CS6

  • March 5, 2017
  • 1 reply
  • 8769 views

Hello,

I have a Premiere Pro CS6 sequence with audio and video from a VHS tape. The video (and scratch audio) was originally recorded onto DVD at 9,100 Kbps using a Panasonic DVD recorder, connected to a separate VCR for the tape's playback. I used another program to passively import the disc's VIDEO_TS files into one .mpeg file, which was then imported into Premiere. The audio was captured simultaneously from the VCR at 32-bit (float)/48kHz using Audition CS6, where a copy was edited (eq, multiband comp), and saved as a 24-bit/48kHz file. I imported that file into Premiere and aligned it with the scratch audio from the DVD.

The video looks great, needing only a slight black/white levels adjustment, and a narrow crop at the bottom, so keeping it high quality is a must. The big question is about exporting the same video with several different audio formats. Should I leave the 24-bit/48kHz file in the timeline, and let Premiere (or Media Encoder) convert it to ac3, AAC, and 16-bit, uncompressed LPCM files on export? Conversely, should I use Audition to take the 24-bit/48kHz file and "Save As" each of the aforementioned formats, which would then be imported back into Premiere sequences? Would it be more efficient for Premiere to export the H.264 (AAC), and MPEG2 (ac3, WAV) video files with their corresponding audio already encoded at the correct spec beforehand, or does it even make a difference? Should I export using Media Encoder instead? The audio is live music from some shows I played with a group some time ago. It sounded good raw, and now really sounds good after the appropriate editing, so keeping that high quality level is paramount. In my years of using Premiere, I'm not experienced enough in video editing where the audio is a mission-critical, analog tape music source, so I don't know which direction to take. I do know that It is destined for DVD, and for online viewing.

I value all input. Thank you.

Eric  

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1 reply

R Neil Haugen
Legend
March 6, 2017

In general, I would just use the high-quality audio you've got as the sequence audio, and export via PrPro or AME. AME is handy, as it can export in the background while you're working, or you can queue exports over to it as you work, and then when done working for the day tell it to start the rendering while you get dinner and go to bed.

As always, one tests the exports to make sure you're doing things right, but with a decent setting for the audio parameters in the Export dialog box, you should be fine.

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
Eric Holtz
Known Participant
March 6, 2017

Thank you for the reply Mr. Haugen. I do wish to have a version of the video with the original, uncompressed 24-bit/48kHz audio for DVD-Video and Blu-ray destinations. Regarding DVD-Video and Blu-ray, can I simply send the 24-bit audio to the authoring program (Encore or NeroVision) and add it to the MPEG video, or does it need to be at 16-bit? The DVD-Video spec allows for 24-bit audio, but I've read many who recommend using 16-bit, without giving concrete answers as to why. Others have also mentioned encoding the audio as Dolby Digital 2.0 (ac3). I have used Dolby Digital for DVDs where there is mainly dialog, but not for live music audio.

The other issue is for video that is destined for the web. It appears that AAC 48kHz is required for YouTube, so will the audio quality take a major hit when converting from 24-bit to 320kbps AAC? I've used Media Encoder for numerous encoding requirements and can attest to your appraisal of the program. I was wondering if it would be more efficient and yield higher quality results for Media Encoder (or Premiere) to simply encode and export video without it having to do anything to the audio, which I would have encoded beforehand in Audition? Am I wrong in assuming that it takes away video processing resources to also process audio?

Update:

I have exported the 720x480 sequence as 1280x720 using the following Media Encoder settings:

H.264 - HD 720p 29.97

1280x720

Field Order: Upper First

Level: 3.2

Aspect: D1/DV NTSC (0.9091)

Target Bitrate: 9 Mbps / Maximum Bitrate: 15 Mbps

AAC 320 kbps 48kHz

The resulting video looks really good on YouTube, while a video exported using the "YouTube SD 480p 29.97" preset did not.

Is there anything inherently wrong with using these arguably unorthodox settings?

Eric

Community Expert
March 8, 2017

I will try the H.264  > YouTube 720p HD preset post back later with the results.

Nero will use either a single .mpg file, or .m2v with .wav files. It too changes the .wav to Dolby Digital AC3. This is part of my audio issue I posted earlier. I wish to use the edited 24-bit/48kHz audio file (perhaps dithered down to 16-bit) for the DVD. I thought about using two audio tracks for the DVD: one track with the edited 24-bit (or 16-bit)/48kHz file, and one track with Dolby Digital AC3.

I'm not really comfortable with having my main audio track highly compressed into Dolby Digital. I use it for dialog, but am leery of using it for critical music.

Thank you,

Eric


https://forums.adobe.com/people/Eric+Holtz  wrote

I'm not really comfortable with having my main audio track highly compressed into Dolby Digital. I use it for dialog, but am leery of using it for critical music.

While you're right to be leery of compression, you have little to worry about with Dolby Digital 2.0 and/or 5.1 encoding as long as you're staring with good quality source audio (like uncompressed 48kHz 16-bit or higher).

Check any store bought Hollywood DVD-Video disc and you're likely to find the Dolby Digital logo.