So maybe it's that old habits die hard, or maybe <likely> I just never really knew what I was doing </likely>, but I am wondering about exporting to audio.
for years when it's come time to export to audio I've painstakingly frozen every track and then exported, choosing the "What I Hear" preset. However, last week I wanted to export midway through the project, so I simply opened Adobe Audition, hit record, and simply played my project, which was then collected by Audition, then saved that as a wav.
So now i'm wondering what the difference even is. My quickie export sounded as good as the painstaking export. Is there any reason I can't simply eschew my old method of freezing and exporting and simply play the beast while Audition is listening?
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jkoseattle
So maybe it's that old habits die hard, or maybe <likely> I just never really knew what I was doing </likely>, but I am wondering about exporting to audio.
for years when it's come time to export to audio I've painstakingly frozen every track and then exported, choosing the "What I Hear" preset. However, last week I wanted to export midway through the project, so I simply opened Adobe Audition, hit record, and simply played my project, which was then collected by Audition, then saved that as a wav.
So now i'm wondering what the difference even is. My quickie export sounded as good as the painstaking export. Is there any reason I can't simply eschew my old method of freezing and exporting and simply play the beast while Audition is listening?
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