I noticed when playing my copy of Tarzan on my Apple TV that it selected the directors commentary DD Stereo track over the 5.1 audio track, is there a way to always select the best audio track (in this case the 5.1 audio track) by default?

I will give an example:

I am Norwegian and have many animated movies for children, with multiple audio tracks. I, as an adult, often prefer to watch for example Disney movies with the original English audio track. The kids, on the other hand, prefer the Norwegian audio track.


Audio Track For Movies


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A typical animated blu-ray movie that you buy in Norway comes with a DTS HD MA English audio track and a DTS or DD Norwegian audio track. DTS HD MA Norwegian audio track only appear in rare cases. For compability reasons, I typically add both DTS and DD audio tracks, in case the file should ever be used on a player without DTS license:

The problem is that in such cases Infuse will select DTS HD MA English, even though I have set Norwegian audio as default, because DTS HD MA English is of higher quality than DTS (non-HD) Norwegian. I do not quite understand the logic of this. Logic would have been that Infuse chose the hightest quality default language audio track (track 1 in the example above).

Thus, all of these movies start automatically with the English audio track. When the kids watch these movies, they have to change the audio track manually (by swiping down and so on) each and every time, which is a barrier to them and something I have to teach them (maybe not that easy for young children).

In an attempt to bypass the problem I described in the post above, I modified a test file in MKVToolNix.

Output: Despicable Me (DTS HD MA English with no default or forced track flag, DTS Norwegian with both default and forced track flag).

Then I tried something else that made me even more suspicious. I tested a file from a DVD (Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with ROO), which contains one DD English and one DD Norwegian audio track, both with the same quality (with the provisio that the norwegian track has slightly lower bitrate), as opposed to the example above where the English track had better quality. Still Infuse chose to play the English track, no matter what the settings and even if only the Norwegian track was marked as default.

To investigate the case even further - Sherlock Holmes style - I checked with yet another file, this time with subtitles. The file contained one English, one Norwegian and one Swedish subtitle (VobSubs). I made sure none of the subtitles was set to default flag before adding it to Infuse.

Just to follow-up on this, we have added a number of improvements to better handled cases like this and these changes will be available in the upcoming 5.7.3 which we hope to submit to Apple next week.

I will be descriptive as possible with my story. For the last 5 years, I've been using Movie Studio Platinum 12 & 13. (I recently changed to Magix Edit Pro Premium) I use OBS (Open Broadcasting System) to record on my personal rig. In OBS, I have it to produce two separate audio tracks on the same video file. My audio file is usually mp4. I have one audio track recording my microphone and the second audio track records all audio coming from whatever programs that are running. (A Video Game, Discord, a Video, etc...) Whenever I dragged my video file into the timeline of Movie Studio, I get all three of my tracks grouped together in their separate slots of the timeline. My video track in the first slot, my first audio track in the second slot and my second audio track in the third slot.

That is how I like my file presented and it is how I worked. I could put any effects I needed to apply to the individual tracks and adjust levels instead of having it all mixed together in a single audio track. Having it all mixed together in one track then gives me the issue of in-game sound possibly being too loud and my microphone cannot be heard and I would not be able to adjust it at all. That is why I like my microphone track and program audio track separate.

Now, leaving Movie Studio and moving to Magix Edit Pro Premium. I do the usual. I drag the video file into the timeline. It first comes up as a single track. I click the option to separate the video from the audio, giving me now two tracks. However, I should have three tracks, not two. Now, right-clicking the audio reveals I can make that audio switch between the two audio tracks labeled, "Audio Track 1" and "Audio Track 2" ( My Microphone track and my in-game audio track) So with this in mind, I know the devs are aware of there being video files with multiple audio tracks attached. So why there is no option to separate my audio tracks into their respective slots is beyond me. Now, the workaround method that I thought to myself, (even found a youtube video demonstrating how to do it, but on an older version of Magix) " is to duplicate the audio file, and switch the duplicate to "Audio Track 2" while leaving the first audio file on, "Audio Track 1" However, when I tried to duplicate the audio file, the "Audio Track 1" and "Audio Track 2" become unselectable. Therefore, I am stuck with a video with two audio tracks both stuck on either, "Audio Track 1" or "Audio Track 2". I'm kinda disappointed that I dropped money on a program that really is built beyond Movie Studio that shouldn't be giving me so much trouble on a simple issue that shouldn't even exist. So, is there really an option/s that would sort this out, or is there not an option, but devs will get on this as soon as possible or did I just waste money on a program that can't meet my needs?

The right click and select Display sound channels Ctrl+Alt+C or Extract sound channels Shift+C commands are for Surround Sound. This puts the Bass or middle speaker on track 3 and L&R rear on track 4. Open the Mixer and you'll see that audio is now in Surround mode.

The audio track has two channels, left and right. I am assuming that you have recorded the mic on one channel and the audio from the computer on the other channel, not track. This is what happens when I use the Capture program from Corel. The only way that I have found to separate the tracks is to:

With OBS, are you describing a multi audio stream video file format - ie it is not a single stereo audio channel, or multi-channel eg. 5.1 Surround sound audio - in other words there are 2 distinct audio streams within the video file?

With VPX you can extract both tracks as shown below and edit them independently - I recorded this an hour for testing -that file is not suitable for public use ??? - what you see below is a short extract of the whole OBS recording, however I will create a new one for you to test.

That was what I was looking for! I knew that I had seen that "Switch current audio track" to Audio 1, Audio 2, recently. What is normally there at the top of the menu is like in MEP, "Display sound channels," but it switches commands if there is more than one audio track, I presume.

This does work for me, but of course, skipping the first step because MEPP does not have the "Restore Original Sound" function. This isn't a really ideal method considering it takes 20 to 30 minutes to do all this for the file. I usually process video files that are 2 hours in length or more at a time. Having to calculate the audio file when bringing it into the editor, then rendering it, then bringing it back to the editor and have it recalculate again, is a big hassle to mess with every time I start a new project. But, I guess it can't be helped if this is the only method available for this.

"Restore Original Sound" only shows up if the audio has been separated from the video like I mentioned, by ungrouping (or sending to the external audio editor, which replaces the sound with a wave file).

Also, you can delete, restore and mute a sound track without separating from the video, by using the Rt-click the video >Audio Function context menu in order to "simplify your timeline" as Magix puts it. Note that removing a crossfaded clip's audio then restoring it leaves the video crossfaded but unfades the faded start portion of the audio. Could be useful in some situations...

In the past, I used an older version of Movie Studio Platinum (I think it was v12 or v13), but I had to upgrade when I recently built a new PC with Win 11. With my previous version I was able to see the audio track and export it into Samplitude PRO X7. Then after editing the audio file in Samp, I was able to import the improved file back into the video. With Movie Studio 2023 Platinum I cannot see the audio track at all, and cannot find anyway to see it within the movie project. Consequently, I am also unable to export the audio track into Samplitude. Does anyone know if this can be done in Movie Studio 2023 and if so . . . . . HOW?

My needs are very simple for this. When my band plays live, we like to video the gig, and then I like to improve the video and audio quality as much as possible. I have really high end mastering and editing plugins in Samplitude that are very useful for this purpose.

There are other ways to do this, like setting Samplitude Pro X7 as the External Audio Editor under Program Settings, Folders tab, doing a mixdown, then doing a round trip to edit in the External Audio Editor.

Thanks very much for the help John. I followed what you said and it worked really well. I'll watch your tutorials after this. :) No idea if my previous version was Vegas or not, I bought it a long time ago. It was not something I used very often, so I never really got very knowledgeable with it. This is something I may use 3 or 4 times a year.

I have been searching the web to determine how to convert my iTunes movies and TV show purchases into an mp3 format, for use on my Victor Stream. I have tried a few different pieces of software but they all seem to be inaccessible. If anyone has suggestions, I would certainly be interested. thanks for any assistance. 152ee80cbc

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