Adobe Audition Vs Premiere Pro

Cover image via

Along with tools for color, audio, and graphics, Premiere Pro works seamlessly with other apps and services, including After Effects, Adobe Audition, and Adobe Stock. Open a Motion Graphics template from After Effects or download one from Adobe Stock and customize it — all without leaving the app. As an example, VideoStudio and Adobe Premiere Pro are scored at 8.8 and 9.5, respectively, for general quality and performance. Similarly, VideoStudio and Adobe Premiere Pro have a user satisfaction rating of 98% and 97%, respectively, which shows the general satisfaction they get from customers.

Getting audio right inside of Premiere Pro is an absolute essential skill for any video editor as the audio of your production represents more than 50% of its viewing value.

If you go to watch a film or documentary and the audio is great but the picture quality is only average, it is likely that you will stay and watch the rest of the film. We’ve grown accustomed to seeing a range of picture qualities through different viewing mediums, Internet, SD, HD, etc.

However, if you go to watch a film or documentary and the picture quality is excellent but the audio is average it is likely that you will struggle with the production and maybe not even stay to watch it through. Because of this we can reason that good audio is worth greater than 50% of your final production.

Thus, it is essential for video editors to take time to learn the various audio tools in Adobe Premiere Pro. If you have Adobe Creative Cloud (the Production Premium Suite or the Master Suite) you should also become familiar with the dedicated audio application Adobe Audition.

Adobe Audition

From CS5.5 the dedicated audio tool in the Adobe suite ‘Soundbooth’ was retired and replaced with the much more capable and powerful ‘Audition’ which integrates smoothly with Premiere Pro. This allows an editor to send single and multiple audio clips directly to Audition from a Premiere Pro timeline for more advanced audio editing. Once modified in Audition, the audio can be sent back to Premiere Pro .

To protect the audio recorded with your video files Premiere Pro won’t export the original audio from your clips. Instead, Premiere will create a copy of the audio file called ‘file name Audio Extracted.filetype‘ which will replace the original audio. Should you really mess the whole thing up, at the very least you can be sure that the original audio can be recovered!

Sending Audio To Audition From Premiere

Adobe audition vs premiere pro 2020

Audio in Premiere Project Panel

Once in Audition a whole world of audio options open up to you with a very easy to use and control audio interface. While there are a great deal of audio effects available inside Premiere Pro it’s far more limiting than Audition.

Take for example reverb…

Reverb in Premiere Pro

As an example, a reverb effect has been applied to a clip inside of Premiere Pro and the user interface opened in the Effects Control Panel. As you can see there is a user interface of sorts but it isn’t very flexible. It often works out easier to use if you expand the ‘Individual Parameters’ drop-down below and then access the sliders to make finer changes. All this takes more time than necessary and is difficult to get to.

One Version of Reverb in Audition

In Adobe Audition however, all the sliders are available as you apply the effect and are easy to use for fine tune changes. Both applications have tools that will do the job, but Audition will do it with much less user overhead than Premiere Pro. Audition also makes it easier to add and control additional effects so that you can come up with exactly what you want.

Adobe Audition will also allow you to save any presets of the changes you have made. Not so in Premiere Pro! To apply a customised Reverb effect to multiple clips inside of Premiere Pro can prove to be a real headache! You can do it to multiple TRACKS by using the ‘Sends’ function, but that’s another blog post entirely!

If you spend the time to get use to using Audition with your Premiere Pro clips – you’ll have better sounding audio and end up saving yourself a lot of time and effort.

I've been tinking with video creation and editing of those videos since January 2018, but really got into it back in August 2019 when I started a weekly vlog on YouTube.

Adobe audition vs premiere pro 2017

When I started my weekly vlog I was using Camtasia to edit my video footage. Looking back at that first few episodes I didn't do much with the footage at all, I might have added a logo (or tried to) and maybe cut off the beginning and ending of me setting up the camera but there was no fancy intro graphics, or outro, or even any lower thirds.

As I gradually grew familiar with Camtasia I did start to add stuff and make things zoom out and in of the screen to help highlight points I was talking about. And I did put together a bit of an outro but nothing that would have any professional video editor worried about me taking over the job.

However, as I started to get into creating the video and editing it, I found over time I wanted to try something I'd seen someone else do in their editing and struggled to get Camtasia to do it. Everything I seemed to want to do or try to do required [Adobe Premiere Pro].

The turning point came when I came back from Seattle in February 2020 and had some video filmed from one of the professional video booths that we have within the Microsoft Campus. The footage I had created had two video angles of me talking. And trying to edit and join that together within Camtasia, just seemed beyond the footage.

So I downloaded a trial of Adobe Premiere Pro after seeing a tutorial of how easy it was to edit multi camera videos in there.

I was sold! I edited the footage with ease and was able to try out some techniques that I had wanted to try and struggled in Camtasia with.

Let's have a look at some of the things I like to do in Adobe Premiere Pro I struggled with in Camtasia.

Multi Cam footage

I often film multiple angles of me, even if I am just sitting at my desk talking to the camera. Or sometimes I'll have my camera on me and also be recording my screen for demos etc. So having those multi camera feeds and being able to pull them into Adobe Premiere Pro, have the software sink them and then edit with great ease saves me a lot of time. The tutorial that I really found helpful in figuring out the basics for this was Barnacules Nerdgasm's video talking about it.

Ease of use

Now this point could be debated, but for me I found Adobe Premiere Pro easier to use and figure out compared to Camtasia. This is maybe because I've used a ton of Adobe software in the past from Dreamweaver back in the day to Photoshop. I just found the interface so much easier to navigate and much more intuitive but I totally get that this is a subjective one and everyone will be a bit different on this point.

Online Knowledge

There is a host of tutorial, blog posts, YouTube videos both from Adobe and the community on how to do things. I always struggled to find material on Camtasia and how to do things and used to give up.

Audio Editing

A lot of people spend time making the audio just right before recording and can probably just go with whatever they have recorded, for me, I like to tweak things just a little after recording. For a home office studio I think my audio sounds good, but I still have some things I want to tweak. For a while I did that in Audacity, which was a bit of a process when I was using Camtasia, taking the audio separately, editing it then pulling it back into Camtasia and editing it and then trying to sync it up with the original and bringing it all together.

Adobe has a great bit of software for audio editing, [Adobe Audition] and I often use that as a separate program but there is some powerful audio editing features built into Adobe Premiere Pro you can leverage without leaving it, so it helps to quicken up my workflow.

Batch Rendering

I often save up filming of videos for one day of the week, it's sometimes easier to block out a whole day in advance within my diary to it, rather than try and fit it in between meetings on other days. I also find it helps to do it in one day when I am in the right frame of mind and dressed right.😀😀

However, when I was using Camtasia this would mean I would have a back log of footage to edit and then render and that took a long time as I would edit something, render it and then have to wait before I could edit the next footage. Or I would edit it all, then render the first one, go away, come back render the next one. It just took a long time.

But in Adobe Premiere Pro there is a batch rendering feature. So I edit all the footage I want and save them, then I queue them up within the [Adobe Media Encoder] and let it render away. I've got into the process of setting this up at the end of the day and letting my machine render the videos while I go and have my dinner and watch TV and check on it before I go to bed. I'm finding it a much easier process to manage.

Adobe Premiere Pro Free

Overview

Adobe Premiere Pro Vs Photoshop

Those are just some of the reasons I prefer Adobe Premiere Pro over Camtasia, however saying that there is one feature the Adobe suite lacks, I haven't found a good way to do screen recordings, so I use Camtasia for that and import the footage into Adobe Premiere Pro to edit. 😉 Nothing is perfect is it? 😀

Adobe Premiere Pro Vs Rush

Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.Blog Comments powered by Disqus.