Use Noise Gate in Final Cut Pro for Mac
In most situations, setting the Noise Gate effect’s Reduction slider to the lowest possible value ensures that sounds below the Threshold value are completely suppressed. Setting Reduction to a higher value attenuates low-level sounds but still allows them to pass. You can also use Reduction to boost the signal by up to 20 dB, which is useful for ducking effects.
The Attack, Hold, and Release knobs modify the dynamic response of Noise Gate. If you want the gate to open extremely quickly for percussive signals such as drums, set the Attack knob to a lower value. For sounds with a slow attack phase, such as string pads, set Attack to a higher value. Similarly, when working with signals that fade out gradually or that have longer reverb tails, set a higher Release knob value that allows the signal to fade out naturally.
The Hold knob determines the minimum amount of time that the gate stays open. You can use the Hold knob to prevent abrupt level changes—known as chattering—caused by rapid opening or closing of the gate.
The Hysteresis slider provides another option for preventing chattering, without needing to define a minimum Hold time. Use it to set the range between the threshold values that open and close Noise Gate. This is useful when the signal level hovers around the Threshold level, causing Noise Gate to switch on and off repeatedly, producing the undesirable chattering effect. The Hysteresis slider essentially sets Noise Gate to open at the Threshold level and remain open until the level drops below another, lower, level. As long as the difference between these two values is large enough to accommodate the fluctuating level of the incoming signal, Noise Gate can function without creating chatter. This value is always negative. Generally, −6 dB is a good place to start.
In some situations, you may find that the level of the signal you want to keep and the level of the noise signal are close, making it difficult to separate them. For example, when you are recording a drum kit and using Noise Gate to isolate the sound of the snare drum, the hi-hat may also open the gate in many cases. To remedy this, use the side-chain controls to isolate the desired trigger signal with the High Cut and Low Cut filters.
Important: The side-chain signal is used only as a detector/trigger in this situation. The filters are used to isolate particular trigger signals in the side-chain source, but they have no influence on the actual gated signal—the audio being routed through Noise Gate.
Use the side-chain filters
In the Final Cut Pro timeline, select a clip with the Noise Gate effect applied, then open the effect’s settings in the Audio inspector.
To add the effect and show its controls, see Add Logic effects to clips in Final Cut Pro for Mac.
Click the Monitor button to hear how the High Cut and Low Cut filters affect the incoming trigger signal.
Drag the High Cut slider to set the upper frequency.
Trigger signals above this are filtered.
Drag the Low Cut slider to set the lower frequency.
Trigger signals below this are filtered.
The filters allow only very high (loud) signal peaks to pass. In the drum kit example, you could remove the hi-hat signal, which is higher in frequency, with the High Cut filter and allow the snare signal to pass. Turn monitoring off to set a suitable Threshold level more easily.
Download this guide: PDF