Quick summary of the app
Adobe Audition is a professional audio workstation built for detailed editing, cleanup, mixing, and mastering. It provides both multitrack sessions for complex projects and precision single-file editing at the sample level. Whether you’re polishing spoken-word recordings, assembling a soundtrack, or rescuing damaged audio, Audition offers tools that aim for broadcast-quality results.
Session layout and recording workflow
- Real-time effects can be applied and adjusted on the fly, so you can hear processing without committing to renders.
- Supports multichannel and surround formats, making it suitable for podcasts, film work, and immersive audio projects.
- Arm tracks, set input levels, and record directly into the timeline for quick takes and live sessions.
- The Essential Sound panel gives quick presets and simplified controls for Dialogue, Music, SFX, and Foley tasks.
Precise editing and restoration tools
- The spectral frequency display visualizes audio content so you can isolate and remove clicks, hum, and other unwanted noises by sight.
- Waveform editing provides sample-level control for surgical edits and fades.
- A suite of restorative processors—adaptive noise reduction, click/pop removers, and DeReverb—helps recover poorly captured dialogue and archival material.
Effects, processing, and batch tasks
- Batch processing and scripting speed up repetitive jobs like exporting multiple formats or applying consistent loudness (LUFs) targets across files.
- The effects rack lets you chain compression, EQ, reverb, and other processors without destructively altering the original audio.
- Non-destructive editing and presets reduce setup time when you need consistent results across episodes or sessions.
Integration with other tools
- Tight Creative Cloud interoperability lets you send sequences from Premiere Pro to Audition and return mixed audio to your video timeline with edits intact.
- Export options and format support make it easy to deliver stems, mixes, or final masters to other platforms and collaborators.
Pros and trade-offs
- Strengths: deep restoration tools, flexible multitrack sessions, visual editing modes, and reliable batch automation.
- Considerations: subscription pricing, a learning curve for advanced features, and higher CPU/RAM demands in large sessions. It is not a full-featured music-production DAW—some specialized instruments and MIDI workflow tools are limited compared with dedicated music suites.
Conclusion
For editors and post-production professionals who need robust cleanup, visual problem-solving, and tight integration with video workflows, Audition delivers a powerful, professional set of features. If your work centers on dialog editing, broadcast delivery, or audio restoration, it’s a strong choice; for deep music production with extensive MIDI/instrument workflows, you may want to pair it with a dedicated DAW.
Technical
- Windows
- Mac
- German
- English
- Spanish
- French
- Italian
- Japanese
- Free Trial