Audacity has several methods available to change speed and tempo of audio.
Caution: Changing speed without affecting the pitch always leads to artefacts. Avoid repeatedly applying these effects.
To change the speed while preserving the pitch, select the audio you want to apply the effect on and go to Effect > Change Tempo
Drag the slider or enter some numbers to change how much you want to speed up or slow down your audio. The controls are linked, so you just need to change the value you care about, the rest will update accordingly.
For extreme slowdowns (10x slower to thousands of times slower), you may want to use Effect > Paulstretch instead.
Note: Paulstretch is only capable of slowing down, so the stretch factor relates to how many times you want to slow down your audio.
The time resolution decides on whether the algorithm will focus on frequencies and pitch at the expense of rhythm (high time resolution), or whether it will focus on rhythm at the expense of pitch (low time resolution). Generally. 0.25 is a good compromise for most music
To change speed and pitch at the same time, use Effect > Change Speed.
Unlike Change Tempo, the Change Speed effect keeps the waveform mostly intact, so you can use this method repeatedly without any major loss in quality.
You can change the speed of an entire project over time using Time Tracks. To add one, go to Tracks > Add New > Time Track. You only can have one time track per project.
Then click on the blue line and drag it upwards or downwards to change the speed at that time. Every time you click, a new control point is added, allowing you to change the speed over time
Tip: By default, the range goes from 90% to 110% speed. If you want to extend that, right-click the vertical scale (going from 90-110) and select Range... to set a new range. The new range may be between 10% and 1000%.
To use it, drag the slider to the desired speed (between 0.01x and 3x) and then click the small play button next to it to playback your audio at that speed. You can use the normal stop and pause controls to stop/pause playback.
If you want to preview your audio at a faster or slower rate than normal, but without affecting the final product, you can use the Play-at-Speed toolbar