Now, my source was an AAF I got for a TV show I mixed and it was exported out of Media Composer. Clearly that’s not very neat but whenever I tried to embed audio into the AAF - with or without ref video rendered alongside the aaf - import failed in Nuendo. I set the in/out points in Resolve and chose to export no video, and also chose NOT to embed audio into the AAF. When I tried embedded it wouldn’t work, regardless of whether I also rendered ref vid at the same time. This created the AAF file in the folder I pointed to along with all audio MXF file next to it. I still recommend trying to go through Resolve then since it’s free. In my case, at this stage am usually looking for a mastered stereo audio track (-16 LUFS for music vid, maybe a different spec for your client), and then just drop that back into the FCPX or Resolve project for final video render. May not exactly fit the workflow depending on what your client wants back. Later, bounce what you need (eg: mastered stereo, mutlichannel stems, or even bounce bask to video, albeit with only one bounce format for now). This will then extract all of the audio tracks and put them on individual lanes. In Nuendo then, is very straightforward: Create a project, then import the video. On the last page of that process, there is a pull down menu for multichannel audio. That requires picking though the ‘share’ menu (as Apple FCPX calls ‘export’). In Resolve there is more control (eg, 24 bit PCM settings etc) but FCPX works fine as well - just a bit more hidden as is usual for MacOS (!). If the audio tracks in FCPX or Resolve are set up with dedicated lanes, then exactly these lanes will export as multichannel audio within the video file. Personally, I always do this (the most straightforward & path of least resistance), no, its not AAF (PITA in general, IMO):īoth Final Cut and Resolve can export a ‘multichannel’ video file.
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