Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Is there a possibility to do this for all the clips? I am not referring to selecting all the clips at the same time and pressing g, because in this way Adobe makes the total sum of the audios and leaves those that were heard little, just as low. I mean doing with everyone at once, what would happen if we went one on one individually.
TY
Yes, for one clip it's the same. Maybe it's better to remove the last option in that case, as it's misleading for new users.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Is this what you are after?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
That is another completely different function, that one takes all the peaks, no matter how small they are, and raises them, which makes the low sounds lose their naturalness, they do not rise proportionally to the high ones, let's say they raise everything absolutely to the maximum and a linear audio remains what is not natural.
The first function that I am asking about, what it does is take THE HIGHEST INDIVIDUAL PEAK OF THE AUDIO TRACK and raises the rest of the track proportionally to the high peak, raising everything equally and maintaining its naturalness but with greater volume .
I want this function, "Normalize Max Peak To:" to be applied individually in some way to all clips independently of each other in the sequence. Because as I said in the first message, if you select all the audio clips and press the G key, what Adobe Premiere Pro understands is that all the clips in the sequence are like a clip together, which is not true, there will be lower clips and higher ones.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
"I want this function, "Normalize Max Peak To:" to be applied individually in some way to all clips independently of each other in the sequence."
As Richard said, this is exactly what "Normalize All Peaks to:" does.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Then why this option appear too when you select only ONE clip of audio?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Yes, for one clip it's the same. Maybe it's better to remove the last option in that case, as it's misleading for new users.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Ty for your help.