How to Edit Podcasts Fast with Orinj — Step-by-Step
Editing podcasts quickly in Orinj is about using a repeatable workflow, keyboard shortcuts, and a few built-in tools effectively. This guide assumes you have Orinj installed and a recorded audio file ready. Follow these steps to go from raw recording to a polished episode in the least time.
1. Prepare your project
- Create a new project: File > New.
- Import audio: File > Import > Audio and add your raw recording(s).
- Set sample rate: Confirm project sample rate matches your recording (usually 44.1 kHz).
2. Rough trim and arrange (5–10 minutes)
- Listen through quickly: Play at 1.25–1.5x speed to identify problem sections.
- Split clips: Place the playhead and press Split to cut around unwanted sections (pauses, digressions).
- Delete or mute: Remove large mistakes or long silences. Use mute for sections you may later restore.
- Arrange segments: Drag clips on the timeline to reorder segments or move intros/outros into place.
3. Normalize and level (3–5 minutes)
- Normalize clips: Select each clip or the whole session and apply Normalize (Effects menu) to bring peaks to a consistent level.
- Adjust clip gain: Use the clip gain handles to balance speakers or segments quickly.
4. Noise reduction and cleanup (5–12 minutes)
- Noise gate: Apply a Noise Gate with a conservative threshold to remove low-level room noise between speech.
- Click/pop removal: Use the DeClicker or manually zoom and delete transient clicks.
- Broad noise reduction: If needed, use Orinj’s noise reduction effect (capture a noise profile if available) and apply gently to avoid artifacts.
5. Equalization (3–6 minutes)
- High-pass filter: Apply a high-pass filter around 60–100 Hz to remove rumble.
- Voice EQ: Slight boost between 2–6 kHz for presence and a gentle cut around 300–500 Hz if muddiness exists. Use broadband, subtle adjustments.
6. Compression (3–6 minutes)
- Light compression: Apply a compressor with moderate ratio (2:1–4:1), medium attack, and medium release to even out levels.
- Use make-up gain: Raise output so the overall level is comparable to pre-compression peaks.
7. De-essing (2–4 minutes)
- Apply de-esser: Reduce harsh sibilance (S, T sounds). Target 5–8 kHz and use moderate reduction to preserve clarity.
8. Final level check and loudness (3–5 minutes)
- Measure loudness: Target -16 LUFS for stereo podcast or -14 LUFS for US broadcast-style loudness (choose one based on your distribution).
- Limiter/peak control: Add a brickwall limiter at the master track to prevent clipping and set ceiling to -0.5 dB.
9. Add music, intros, and metadata (3–8 minutes)
- Import music beds/bumps: Place under voice tracks at lower volume (-18 to -25 dB relative).
- Fade music: Use automated fades (fade-in/out) to avoid abrupt cuts.
- Add metadata: File > Export > Metadata (if available) or use your hosting provider to set episode title and description.
10. Export and quality check (2–4 minutes)
- Export: File > Export > Mixdown. Choose MP3 (128–192 kbps) or AAC for delivery.
- Quick listen: Play exported file to ensure no glitches, levels OK, and transitions smooth.
Speed tips and shortcuts
- Use keyboard shortcuts: Learn Split, Play/Pause, Zoom in/out for faster edits.
- Work in passes: Do rough editing first, then process in passes (cleanup → EQ → compression).
- Templates: Save a session template with preferred tracks, effects chains, and routing.
- Batch processing: Apply normalization and other effects to multiple clips at once.
- Use markers: Mark problem spots during the first quick listen to jump back easily.
Example minimal timeline (time estimates)
- Import & setup: 2–3 min
- Rough trim: 5–10 min
- Cleanup & noise reduction: 5–12 min
- EQ/Compression/De-ess: 8–12 min
- Music, final mixdown: 5–10 min
Total: ~25–45 minutes for a 30–60 minute episode with this streamlined workflow.
Follow this workflow consistently and customize effect presets to shave more time off future edits.
Leave a Reply