Len Rosenberg
January 30th, 2024, 07:58 PM
Audio question: I'm using the HC-X1 in a studio with two condenser mics into the XLR jacks. I have the mic settings with one mic into Channel 1 and the other into Channel 2. When I import the clip into Premier Pro, I get only one audio channel that contains both Channel 1 and Channel 2. I'd like to know what settings to use so that the clip has Channel 1 on Audio track 1 and Channel 2 on Audio track 2. Is that possible? Or is there a way to split the Audio 1 track into two separate tracks, each containing one of the recorded Channels? Thanks for any help!
Pete Cofrancesco
January 30th, 2024, 09:42 PM
I haven't used Premiere in a long time but it assumes it's a stereo track and groups them together by default. You'll need to specify they're mono and it should split them into two separate mono channels that can be adjusted independently.
Here's Curtis showing how to do it if they were recorded separately in an audio recorded but the method would probably be applicable to the video file.
Split multi-channel audio to separate tracks in Premiere Pro - YouTube
Len Rosenberg
January 30th, 2024, 11:12 PM
Thanks Pete, that's a great hack, but I don't understand why Channel 1 and 2 get combined into one audio track. The HC-X1 allows for 2 tracks, why are they combined into one in the resulting clip?
Pete Cofrancesco
January 30th, 2024, 11:41 PM
Thanks Pete, that's a great hack, but I don't understand why Channel 1 and 2 get combined into one audio track. The HC-X1 allows for 2 tracks, why are they combined into one in the resulting clip?
The two tracks aren't mixed together, if they were you wouldn't be able to split them. Channel 1 goes to the left speaker, Channel 2 to the right. Those two channels are linked together so if you apply any changes they effect both channels. The software assumes you intended as stereo because that's the most common purpose of two channels. If you intend to use them differently you need to tell the software since it can't read your mind.
Len Rosenberg
January 31st, 2024, 05:56 AM
Thanks Pete for that explanation, much appreciated.