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Mrs. Avocado, Seattle Age and Occupation: 23, Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Consultant Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: October, 2008 Blogging Since: June 30, 2008 Venue: LDS Seattle Temple & Hotel 1000 About Me: Somehow this little farm girl found herself a genuine Pole to fall in love and eventually move away to Poland with. I am an LDS bride attempting to plan a private religious ceremony, ring ceremony, seated reception for 100, and an open house while coordinating for guests flying in from across the United States and as far away as Poland. I try to avoid fads, excess waste, and saturated fat. I strongly endorse photography, DDR, calorie counting, rss feeds, cooking, and utilizing your resources.
About Mrs. Avocado

How to Cut Your Own First Dance Song

September 29th, 2008 @ 3:05 pm by Mrs. Avocado

Ask and ye shall receive, my friends. It’s DIY week for me, and I couldn’t be more excited to share the following projects with you. I wish I had five, because that would a be a complete workweek of projects, and it’s just a nice number, but I only have four. I am busy, so I might not even get them all posted this week. But they are going to be good ones. Well obviously I think they are, or I wouldn’t be posting them. :)

Let’s begin with my tutorial on how to cut your own first dance. Mr. Avocado and I will be dancing to “Meet Me By The Water” by Rachel Yamagata, but it has this 50 second intro we would have to wait through. Plus we don’t really feel like fox trotting around for four whole minutes.

Before you begin, you will need to download the program Goldwave.

You can find it here. It’s free for limited use (like cutting your first dance song!) and un-installs cleanly.

Your song needs to be in MP3 format. If it is in a protected format, burn it to a CD (choose the “audio CD” option using iTunes) and then re-import the song back onto your computer. Now you have your previously protected unusable song in MP3 format.

Open up the Goldwave program, and go to File > Open, then browse through your computer files to find the MP3 version of your song.

Your song will open up and look somewhat like this. The waves can look intimidating at first, but you just have to remember that whenever the sound is louder, the waves are larger. All of those really small waves at the beginning are what I want to cut out (it’s the 50 second intro).

On the far left and right sides there are blue bars. I clicked on the left side, held the mouse button down, and dragged the blue band over to the right so that everything I wanted to keep would be highlighted.

I then went up to the toolbar and clicked on the trim button (the yellow arrows are pointing to it). This will eliminate everything that isn’t inside of the blue bars and highlighted.

Now, the beginning started really abruptly and I needed to have it fade in. I grabbed the bar on the right side and dragged it over until it highlighted the area I wanted to fade in. I selected fade in on the toolbar, and presto! I had some beautiful fade in action.

After all of this work, I wanted the song to be even shorter, so I decided to take out all of her singing in the beginning. I dragged the blue bars from the left and right side to highlight the area I wanted to eliminate and hit the “trim” button again.

This left me with an awkward break, so I highlighted the awkwardness and used the fade out button to help tone the transition down a little.

Now my song was complete. I went to File, chose Save As, and made sure to put “First Dance” in front of the file name so I knew which song was the cut one.

This is what the original song sounded like:

This is what I came up with*:

I think it sounds really natural, and none of our guests will even know I did a little home doctoring to shorten the length (although I might cut it down even more, since I think it is still really long).

Did you attempt to cut your own first dance song?

Please leave any questions or concerns you might have in the comments, I would love to try to walk you through any problems you might be having.

*All photos for the music video I created were found here.

14 Responses to “How to Cut Your Own First Dance Song”

1.
Cassie says:

I just wanted to say that I love that your first dance is to Rachel Y. I saw her in concert awhile back….AMAZING. :)

2.
IdahoSummer says:

This is a great tutorial, thank you! Even after taking dance lessons I’m going to be really uncomfortable having all those eyes on us. Now I can just shorten it, perfect!

3.
chelseamorning says:

How timely! I used WavePad to trim my first dance song just last week! I trimmed our 7.5 minute song down to 4 minutes. We are dancers though so hopefully we will give them something interesting to look at. :)

4.
budgetbeautiful says:

Thank you for this, I was thinking I’d have to cut down my processional music, so I’m saving this post to my favorites when it’s time to tackle that chore!

5.
yelli says:

Thank you thank you for posting this! This is going to be so helpful!

6.
Kirsten says:

Thanks for sharing this tip Miss Avocado!

I did this too with most of our wedding music. It was a big project but has been my favorite DIY so far! And our DJ was amazed that I pretty much did his job for him! It’s actually quite easy to do once you get the hang of it.

I used a similar program to create edited versions of pretty much all the songs we will be using (dances, cake cutting, bouquet toss) during the reception, so we will only hear the specific part of the song we want. Our grand entrance also incorporates song clips, where every member of the bridal party will be individually introduced and then walk in to the song we’ve chosen for them. Of course they won’t know what their song is beforehand, so it should make for some great moments!

7.
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Mrs. Tulip says:

What a great tip! Though we loved our eventual choice of first dance song, there would have been so many more options if we’d known this handy little trick.

Also, I *adore* Rachel Yamagata. “1963″ made our cocktail mix — love how it captures the simple happiness of being in love….

8.
How to Cut Your Own First Dance Song says:

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9.
CaitStClair says:

Thank you so much for posting this! I was wondering how we were going to manage our first songs.
My question is can you splice two songs together? Our families love watching us dance so we’re going to tease them with a slow classic (Chris LeDoux’s Look At You Girl) before going into “our” fun and fast song (Shooter Jenning’s 4th of July).

10.
CaitStClair says:

Oops. We’re mac folks, but I guess we do still have that dinosaur of a PC in the other room… Might have to break that out.

11.
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Miss Avocado says:

@CaitStClair: The best way to “mix” the two songs together would be to use a program that has two different audio tracks you can manipulate. Garage band (which I believe is free on macs) would be the perfect solution for that. Use an editing program (again, garage band should be able to do what goldwave did) to first cut the two tracks down to what you want them to be. Then you should be able to “layer” them together and create a nice blend between the two. I’m not a garage band expert, so I can’t be much help in the technical stuff, but I used to use Final Cut Pro to do this and it worked pretty well. Good luck!

12.
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Miss Avocado says:

@Kirsten: That sounds like a ton of work, but the faces of your wedding party will be just priceless when they hear your choices for each of them!

13.
Trish says:

Great post, Miss Avo!

For those who are looking to do a lot of editing, I just wanted to add that Audacity is an excellent program for full-featured audio editing - and it’s free and open source for both PCs and Macs, too. :)

14.
CaitStClair says:

Garage Band! Of course! I wasn’t thinking!


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Mrs. Avocado Mrs. Avocado, Seattle Age and Occupation: 23, Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Consultant Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: October, 2008 Blogging Since: June 30, 2008 Venue: LDS Seattle Temple & Hotel 1000 About Me: Somehow this little farm girl found herself a genuine Pole to fall in love and eventually move away to Poland with. I am an LDS bride attempting to plan a private religious ceremony, ring ceremony, seated reception for 100, and an open house while coordinating for guests flying in from across the United States and as far away as Poland. I try to avoid fads, excess waste, and saturated fat. I strongly endorse photography, DDR, calorie counting, rss feeds, cooking, and utilizing your resources.