Then press the Converted button to find your Apple Music files. The previous part helps you get the converted Apple Music tracks. To add the converted Apple Music to Keynote, check the following steps. Step 1. Launch Keynote on your computer. Select the slide that you want to add music to.
Step 2. On the toolbar, click Media. Select the Music button and add the Apple Music songs from the computer. You can also drag the Apple Music tracks to Keynote directly. Step 3. Click the Play button to play the imported song in Keynote. Step 4. You are also able to adjust the imported music in Keynote.
I completed my keynote presentation and added music for the whole presentation. However the moment the presentation ends, the slide stops abruptly and subsequently disappears and shows and shows a blank screen. I want to presentation to stop at the end slide and not disappear. Appreciate if you can guide me achieving my need to complete the presentation without any hiccups to abrupt stoppage. Thank you. Sound usuallly has to be continuous, slides are by their very nature not.
The most reasonable way would be to start the sound and click slides in and out along the way. And then, of course, it should be possible to adjust time codes afterwards. Then you could have a sound that played over multiple slides. It is such a simple feature that is missing. I can do this perfectly well in PowerPoint, but only have a Mac to play the presentation on.
Hi Kate. I just checked the Apple documentation and there is no instructions about this. I have just updated the article to reflect this. Sorry about that but I wrote this article with an older version of Keynote. I have also upgraded the article it with some newer screenshots for you. I have added music to each of my slides. I can trim the length of each music extract but would like to fade-out each extract while the slide continues to show rather than cut the extract abruptly.
How can I do this, please? Audacity and put a fade onto it, then export the new music file with the fade in it and put it into the keynote. More helpful hints using audacity. If you want certain sounds from a longer piece of music to match a certain slide, you can use Audacity to add sound clips exactly.
In Audacity you can add exact seconds of silence between parts of a sound recording. Make one at the beginning and copy it. Decide where you want to separate the original sound into parts. At each break, press paste. A silent space will insert at that point.
Go to File Export and name it. Now, save the work you did a new name. Save to a known location such as desktop. Remember, the one you worked on is the original. Now you have a sound file that could be drawn like this — — — — — — — — - Select the 1st part at the last half of the into to the 1st part of the outro: - - Cut it.
If you want to use a fade, you select the part you want to fade and select fade in. Select the ending and select Fade out. Go back to your large sound file. Cut off the second bite it is now the first bite and make a new file and paste it in. Fade as you wish. Drag the audio file onto the slide, and you'll see a small icon appear it will be invisible during playback.
Click on the audio icon, and then select "Inspector" from the main Keynote menu. Choose "Build", and then choose "Open Drawer". All of the current effects including the audio file will be listed in the Build window, located on the left side. Finally, select the audio file in the Build window. You can decide how the audio will play when you reach the slide.
If you choose "Start Build", Keynote allows you to sync audio playback with another object's appearance in the slide. Click in the toolbar , click Movies or Music, then drag a file to a media placeholder or anywhere else on the slide. Tip: To search for a music file, click the magnifying glass in the upper-right corner of the media window.
Click the Play button on the media to play it. Click in the toolbar , then click Web Video. To play the web video in your presentation, click the Play button.
When you paste supported video links into your presentation, they are inserted as web videos by default. You can add a description to any video in your presentation. Video descriptions are read by assistive technology for example, VoiceOver when someone uses that technology to access your presentation. Click the video to select it, then in the Format sidebar , click the Movie tab. If you export your presentation as a PDF, video descriptions are still readable by assistive technology.
To add descriptions to an image, see Add an image description.
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