 Hello, everyone. Welcome back to another Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2021 tutorial. In this one, I'm going to show you how to speed up your audio, but we're not going to change your pitch. We're going to maintain the same sound, the same pitch, as opposed to the sped-up chipmunk sound that you're used to. Let's show you how to do this. The first step here is I've just got some footage on my timeline, as you can see here. The next step is I'm going to left-click on it, or I'm going to select the video and the audio, and then I'm going to right-click and go down to speed duration. For this demonstration, I'm going to go to 150%, so it's going to basically 50% increase in speed. So when I do that, you're going to see that the length of the footage and the audio has compressed, and actually still has your voice. Let me show you what this sounds like now. Hello, everybody. Welcome back to another Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2021 tutorial. Yeah, so a guy like me has a reasonably decent deep voice sounded like a chipmunk. All right, we can fix that. Let's go. The next step here is you want to go to your effects panel. If you don't see it, go to Window, and make sure there's a check mark beside Effects. Under the Effects panel, type in the following pitch. P-I-T-C-H, and when you do that, you're going to see something called Pitch Shifter. This is an audio effect, and this is going to allow us to adjust the pitch so that we don't sound again like a squeaky little chipmunk. Drag and drop Pitch Shifter onto your audio. If you don't, if you say that quickly, you could say something really, really inappropriate. But yeah, Pitch Shifter. All right, good. Now, when you go into your effect controls panel over here on the left side, if you don't see that, make sure there's a check mark beside Effect Controls, and that's it. And you'll see Pitch Shifter. Now, when you click on Pitch Shifter, there's some individual parameters. This is where you want to work. You want to go to Pitch Shifter, the individual parameters, and then here you have this little slidey bar, and you need to dial this back. Now, for me, I'm just going to show you. I'll go way back to 0.60 and hear what it sounds like. Okay, that doesn't sound right. And if you go to, like, 0.9, for example, you're too loud. So the number we're looking for is somewhere around 0.65, if I remember correctly. Let's see what this sounds like. That is my voice. That is generally how I sound. It's not quite perfect, but it's pretty darn close. That's it, guys. Thanks for watching this tutorial. Be back soon with some more stuff.