As for Corel Video Studio I've never heard of it before so I don't know from personal experience what it can or can't do, but if it can do the stuff I've mentioned in my comments/post for this video like allow you to tweak audio/video speeds on top of the regular editing features then it should for the most part work fine as long as you know the program well enough to where you know where to find the tools you'd need to not only do the effect but also tweak it so that it looks good
no, you can use other audio/video editing programs as long as the program has the tools that allow you to tweak the audio/video playback speed settings as well as let you unlink/link the audio from the video (makes it easier to delete the sound that the camera recorded with the video and replace it with the song), and can read/use a variety of audio file types (midi,mp3,etc). The programs that I've mentioned are ones that I know from past experience can be used to create this effect .
I imported the song I used into a free audio editing program called Audacity, I then selected the song and put it on the editing timeline. I then went to the effects menu and selected speed change, when the sub menu popped up I entered the speed percentage I wanted to change the song to which in this case was 200%. I then went to the file menu and selected export, where I saved the sped up song as a wave file.
I set up my video camera, then opened up the wave file, pressed record on my camera, played the song and began singing along with it. I then hooked up my camera to my computer via a firewire connection and imported/captured the video and the original song into Sony Vegas Movie Studio. I moved the video and song onto the timeline for editing.
Once the video was on the timeline I highlighted the video, press and held the ctrl button and the using the mouse went to the end of the clip and extended it all the way to the end of the original song which had slowed it down by approximately 50%. I then went about fine tuning the video to where my mouth lined up with the lyrics from the original song. Once I was happy with it I cut off all but 1 min 16 seconds and then exported it as a .avi file,
nowadays doing this is much easier than the way I did it especially if you have a higher grade video editing program such as Final Cut Pro Express (Mac only) or Adobe Premiere Pro (PC and Only Macs with Intel Processors) because with those program you can go into a menu select speed change and type in the percentage that you want to speed up or slow down the video.
Also just a heads up don't try to do this effect in a music video using a song that you don't own the rights to, because you might get into legal trouble. Now the only reason I really haven't gotten into any legal trouble over using a song I don't own the right to is because of the amount of the song I used ( approx 1/3 of the overall song) and the way I am using it in my video ( which is educational in nature ) allows it to fall under the fair use clause in current U.S. copyright law.
awesome song selection :D
lycon17 7 months ago
As for Corel Video Studio I've never heard of it before so I don't know from personal experience what it can or can't do, but if it can do the stuff I've mentioned in my comments/post for this video like allow you to tweak audio/video speeds on top of the regular editing features then it should for the most part work fine as long as you know the program well enough to where you know where to find the tools you'd need to not only do the effect but also tweak it so that it looks good
tav7623 1 year ago
no, you can use other audio/video editing programs as long as the program has the tools that allow you to tweak the audio/video playback speed settings as well as let you unlink/link the audio from the video (makes it easier to delete the sound that the camera recorded with the video and replace it with the song), and can read/use a variety of audio file types (midi,mp3,etc). The programs that I've mentioned are ones that I know from past experience can be used to create this effect .
tav7623 1 year ago
are those the only software you can use? how bout Corel video studio?
misterKevin07 1 year ago
Part 1: Speeding up the song
I imported the song I used into a free audio editing program called Audacity, I then selected the song and put it on the editing timeline. I then went to the effects menu and selected speed change, when the sub menu popped up I entered the speed percentage I wanted to change the song to which in this case was 200%. I then went to the file menu and selected export, where I saved the sped up song as a wave file.
tav7623 1 year ago
Part 2: Shooting and importing the video
I set up my video camera, then opened up the wave file, pressed record on my camera, played the song and began singing along with it. I then hooked up my camera to my computer via a firewire connection and imported/captured the video and the original song into Sony Vegas Movie Studio. I moved the video and song onto the timeline for editing.
tav7623 1 year ago
Part 3: Editing and exporting
Once the video was on the timeline I highlighted the video, press and held the ctrl button and the using the mouse went to the end of the clip and extended it all the way to the end of the original song which had slowed it down by approximately 50%. I then went about fine tuning the video to where my mouth lined up with the lyrics from the original song. Once I was happy with it I cut off all but 1 min 16 seconds and then exported it as a .avi file,
tav7623 1 year ago
nowadays doing this is much easier than the way I did it especially if you have a higher grade video editing program such as Final Cut Pro Express (Mac only) or Adobe Premiere Pro (PC and Only Macs with Intel Processors) because with those program you can go into a menu select speed change and type in the percentage that you want to speed up or slow down the video.
tav7623 1 year ago
Also just a heads up don't try to do this effect in a music video using a song that you don't own the rights to, because you might get into legal trouble. Now the only reason I really haven't gotten into any legal trouble over using a song I don't own the right to is because of the amount of the song I used ( approx 1/3 of the overall song) and the way I am using it in my video ( which is educational in nature ) allows it to fall under the fair use clause in current U.S. copyright law.
tav7623 1 year ago
errrrr.....HOW ?
idro2k 1 year ago
you fuckin legend
cubesearch 2 years ago
nice job
skylargannon 3 years ago