Friday, September 16, 2016

Download guide: Download free audio editor Audacity to make your own karaoke tracks

Download guide: Download free audio editor Audacity to make your own karaoke tracks

Make your own karaoke tracks with Audacity

Audacity is the world's best free audio editor, and it's a budding karaoke star's dream thanks to its ability to strip the vocals from your favorite songs.

Download Audacity freeIt's a simple process: vocals are usually in the center of a stereo tracks – half on one channel and half on the other – so by inverting one channel you can make the two parts cancel each other out. With a good quality sound file, it's usually very effective.

Naturally, you should only use this to make karaoke songs for personal use; don't redistribute the resulting files without permission from the copyright holder.

Audacity - splitting stereo track

First, a little preparation. In order to export your finished karaoke song in MP3 format, you'll need the LAME MP3 encoder. This isn't included in Audacity by default, but you can download it free here, then install it by opening the EXE file.

Once that's done, download and install Audacity. Import your chosen track by dragging it into the main window. On the left-hand side of the waveform, beside the name of the track, you'll see a black downward-pointing arrow. Click this and select 'Split stereo track'.

Double-click the bottom track to select it, then click Effects > Invert. Click the menu arrow beside each track's waveform and select Mono, then click File > Export Audio. MP3 is a good format so you can play it using any media player, and you can stick with the standard export settings. Choose whether to edit the track's metadata (adding the word 'karaoke' to the title might be helpful) and click OK.

Exporting karaoke track from Audacity

Lots of sites publish song lyrics to help with your home karaoke sessions (particularly useful if you've chosen to croon along to REM), but MetroLyrics is our favorite thanks to its accuracy, excellent search tool and the fact that it compensates copyright holders for the right to publish their lyrics.

The music used to illustrate this guide is 'Let It In' by Josh Woodward. Free download: http://joshwoodward.com.



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