I've got a long timeline setup with audio and video all synced together nicely, and I've got gaps in the timeline with no video (audio correctly continues). I want to fill those gaps with b roll that I've shot but every time I add the clips on top, if they're longer than the gap it overwrites the next clip. 1) Open your sequence, let's call it ForMix, and select Sequence / Simplify sequence and check the option to remove the Audio Clips that are disabled. Premiere creates a new sequence only with the Enabled clips, let's call it ForMix -A. 2) Reopen your ForMix original sequence, select all the clips and Shift + CMD + E. It's the ideal audio workspace to reduce noise in Premiere Pro. Step 1. Activate the Essential Sound Panel. To activate the Essential Sound panel, go to Window > Essential Sound panel and check it. The Essential Sound panel will appear; select your audio clip and choose the tag Dialogue. Step 2. Press it to separate the audio from video. When the audio is separated from the video, you can select the separated audio layer and hit the delete key on your keyboard, or right-click on the separated audio layer and select the " Clear " option from the drop-down menu to delete the audio layer. Step 3. Despite the limitations, using the method of marking audio in Audition, creating a dummy video in Media Encoder, then replacing the dummy video clips in Premiere Pro, can save a ton of time. The longer the file, the more time saved considering this takes only around a few minutes to complete. 9Wrtdj.

premiere pro delete audio only