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Tutorial: Auto-Ducking Audio in Adobe Premiere Pro CC

This tutorial demonstrates how to use Premiere Pro CC's Essential Sound Panel to automate the audio-ducking process in video projects that combine dialogue with underlying music tracks, speeding the process and potentially smoothing the mix as well.

If you’ve ever watched any of the mini-documentaries about the recording of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” or the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations,” you know that the primary composers of these dizzyingly complex songs, Freddie Mercury and Brian Wilson, respectively, essentially walked into the studio with nearly everything you hear on the record playing in their heads. What’s more, by the time they set out to tackle these ambitious tracks, both had mastered the recording process to the degree that they knew how to bring the sounds in their heads, piece by piece, out into the world--and had the patience to do it--even if the singers, musicians, and engineers they enlisted to help them had little sense of what they were creating until all the pieces were in place.

Contrast those stories to the genesis of Bruce Springsteen’s roughly contemporaneous (to “Bohemian Rhapsody") Born to Run album, a tortured process through which neither Springsteen nor either of his producers had a clear idea of how to get the sound he wanted onto wax. Even though the record they ended up with made Springsteen a star, and at least came close to realizing his epic ambitions, it took forever, and completing the album nearly killed everyone involved. Well-earned critical and fan hosannas aside, E Street Band guitarist Steve Van Zandt ultimately provided the clearest clinical assessment of what Springsteen achieved on that record: “He made something feel good that didn’t feel good at all when he was making it.”

Getting sound right in corporate and marketing video is typically a lot simpler than on “pocket symphony” rock records. In fact, it’s usually a lot simpler than sound design in the movies. But on editing teams of one, sound mixing tends to be an aspect of postproduction that doesn’t play to a video editor’s strengths, and matching up sound to what you think you should be hearing can sometimes prove more challenging than correcting or grading a video to the look you want to see.

Such has always been the case for me with circumstances that call for sound ducking, or adjusting a music track that’s been the primary (or only) component in a soundscape to a secondary, complementary role when the talent starts speaking. I know good sound ducking when I hear it, and I hear it all the time; I just don’t have the feel for achieving it that I wish I did. It's also a time-consuming and repetitive process when a video has multiple shifts between speakers or transitional breaks for titles or other clips.

So when I heard that Adobe had introduced an Auto-Ducking feature into a new release of Premiere Pro CC earlier this year, I was eager to see and hear what it could do for me. For the types of videos I do, this feature would (I hoped) serve three purposes: improving the quality of my sound mixing using whatever algorithms Adobe had built into the applications to analyze and respond to the dynamics of the existing soundscape; give me more facile tools for audio adjustments (as the new Essential Color panel had done for color correction); and automate the process of adjusting the background audio back up during breaks in the dialogue.

In this article, I’m going to try out auto-ducking on a case study video I did for a company called ActiveStandards a couple years back. The visuals came out reasonably well (if a little dark, and I’m still kicking myself for one way-too-visible lav), but I was never satisfied with the audio. Neither was ActiveStandards, at least with the first cut, since they insisted on a dull audio track that completely disappeared in the mix. I’d started out with a track that supported the video well, but they found it too intrusive, and part of the reason was it wasn’t ducked as well as it should have been. Here is the video they ultimately approved (note the near-total dead air between speakers):

ActiveStandards Interviews_Vimeo from Steve Nathans-Kelly on Vimeo.

And here is a portion of the underducked cut they rejected:

ActiveStandards Success Story from Steve Nathans-Kelly on Vimeo.

So, the goal here would be to see if, using the new auto-ducking feature in Premiere Pro, I could make that more vibrant track work better than it did in the cut they didn’t like.

And just so we have a starting point, here’s what this project sounds like with the dialogue and music at equal volume:

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