Making audio loops
This page is an introduction to creating background beats and audio loops from a pre-existing audio file.
Audio loops are a type of music that plays a few bars on repeat over and over. They can be created by taking a sample out of pre-existing content and looping it seamlessly.
1. Enable playback looping

To enable playback looping, simply click onto the loop button (1). When you do this, you'll note the blue looping region appear in the timeline (2). You can move the region and it's in and out point individually by dragging it.
2. Finding the looping region

When making a loop out of music, you often will be able to see repetitions in the waveform as your source material will probably contain some loop already (for example a drummer playing the same beat throughout the song). You can use these to roughly find good looping regions and position your looping region above it.
Fine-tuning the loop and removing clicks
To make the loop seamless, you may need to zoom in some more, using Ctrl+Scroll
(Cmd+Scroll
) or the magnifying glass.
Best practice: Set your looping points at a zero crossing, where the waveform (blue line) crosses 0 (black line):
3. Turn your loop into a clip
Once your loop sounds right, you can select it's length in the waveform. A yellow line will appear when your cursor is lined up with the loop region properly. Once you have made the selection, you now can simply right-click > Split Clip (Ctrl+I, Cmd+I
).
Once you have the clip, you can copy-paste it anywhere in your project.
See also:
Saving and exporting projectsLast updated
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