Comments

rraud wrote on 8/30/2020, 4:30 PM

Sound Forge is a multi-channel editing application and really not designed for this type of work. A multi-track DAW is what you need. Vegas can do this, ProTools, or even the free Audacity would be better suited for multi-track mixing.

That said, you could 'copy' one track and paste in in using the Mix function, (aka, sound-on-sound) and repeat for the other tracks. But that is a lot of trial and error and does not have options for specific effects on single tracks and such.

btw, @lee-robin, welcome to the Magix Sound Forge users forum

Former user wrote on 8/31/2020, 11:31 AM

+1 for Audacity. I keep a copy around whenever I want to merge a bunch of different files into a single file. I don't use Audacity all of the time, but it can be very handy for some PITA jobs.