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What’s the fastest, easiest way to get started using Soundly to add, find, and transfer sound effects into your projects?

This post is a quick-start guide to help you begin searching and using your sound library in minutes. It focuses on the broad strokes to complete tasks easily and swiftly. Future articles will share extra features, options, and detailed how-to guides.


Written by Paul Virostek.
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The Soundly How-To Series:

This is the second part in the Soundly series by SFX guru Paul Virostek – here are the other ones:

1. An introduction to Soundly
3. How to Organize Sound Libraries with Soundly
4. How to Find and Use Sound FX Clips with Soundly
5. 5 Killer Features in Soundly


If you want to take Soundly 2 for a spin, download it for free for Windows here, and Mac here.

Installing Soundly

Getting started with Soundly is easy. First, let’s begin by downloading the Soundly app to your computer.

MacOS

Soundly supports MacOS 10.6.8 and later.

  1. Visit www.getsoundly.com.
  2. Click the Apple icon beneath the “download for free” text. This will begin downloading the installation app to your default download location on computer.
  3. Go to your default download location.
  4. Double click Soundly.dmg. A new window will open.
  5. Drag and drop the Soundly icon to the Applications folder.
  6. Go the Applications folder.
  7. Double click the Soundly icon. This will launch Soundly.

Windows

Soundly supports Windows XP and later.

  1. Visit www.getsoundly.com.
  2. Click the Windows icon beneath the “download for free” text. This will begin downloading the installation app to your default download location on computer.
  3. Go to your default download location.
  4. Open Soundly-setup.exe.
  5. Follow the setup wizard and select the destination folder for Soundly.
  6. Go to destination folder for Soundly.
  7. Double click the Soundly icon.

Creating a Soundly Account

Soundly isn’t burdened by copy protection schemes. Instead, using the app requires only a simple email account. As soon as you launch Soundly you will be asked to create an account.

  1. Open Soundly.
  2. Click Register.
  3. Type your email and create a password.
  4. Click the button next to “I have read and agreed to the EULA.”
  5. Click Select Subscription. A new page will appear.
  6. Choose your subscription from the three options: Free, 24hr Pass or Pro Monthly.

    If you have selected a subscription with fee (24hr Pass or Pro Monthly):

    1. Fill out your Billing details.
    2. Click Payment.
    3. Fill out your credit or debit card information.
    4. Click Purchase.

Note: if you have selected Pro Monthly, a monthly fee ($14.99) will be charged to your credit or debit card.

An Introduction to the Soundly Workspace

Once you have created an account, the main Soundly workspace will appear. This is where you will spend most of your time using Soundly.

(There are other areas, such as the Store, News, and Settings pages, which will be discussed in later posts.)


Sound libraries and playlists are shown in the left pane.

This area is used to add and remove sound libraries and folders of sounds, and gather them in playlists or “Starred” favourite lists.

This area is a way to see entire sound collections, clip libraries, and global groups of sounds.

Search results are displayed in the large pane to the right. This shows sounds in a chart view that displays the name, description, and sound stats.

The bottom area presents a selected sound’s waveform, complete with play/stop and rewind transport controls, volume, speed, and selected sound file stats.

The window can also be organized in “Dock-Mode.” This presents all panes organized left-to-right at the base of the OS desktop. This is a helpful way of saving screen space. It is also a valuable way to allow Soundly and editing apps to work side-by-side.
 

Adding Sound Libraries to Soundly

The easiest way to add sound libraries to Soundly is to simply drag and drop them on the main Soundly window.

  1. Select a folder of sound files from a hard drive.
  2. Drag and drop the folder onto the main Soundly browsing window. A new window will appear.
  3. Release the folder on the Local area of the window. A new window will appear.
  4. Click Import. The files will be indexed and added.

That’s it! The files will be added to Soundly. You can find them by clicking the arrow to the left of Local in the left pane, then clicking the name of the sound library. This will display all sounds from that folder.

Finding Sound FX in Soundly

How can you find the clips you need? The easiest way to find sound fx is:

  1. Click the white field next to the magnifying glass in the upper left of the main window.
  2. Type keywords for the sound you want to find.
  3. Press the return key. Results will be displayed in the right pane.

 

Auditioning Sound Clips in Soundly

Soundly has powerful tools to play and manipulate clips. The simplest way to listen to clips is to click on a row in the search results. The sound will begin playing immediately. Press spacebar to stop and restart playback.

Soundly also allows playback of a portion of a sound. Simply drag the mouse cursor across an area of the sound waveform. This will highlight the area that will be played. Press spacebar to begin playback of just this section of the whole sound clip.
 

Transferring Sound

Once you have found a clip you like, you can transfer it to other apps, such as video editing apps, desktop folders, or sound editing apps. Here’s how:

  1. Select the sound you want in the right pane of the search results.
  2. Select the part of the sound you want to transfer.
    • To transfer the whole sound, type CMD/CTRL+a to select it all.
    • To transfer part of a sound, drag across a portion of the sound to highlight the area you’d like to transfer.
  3. Click and hold the selected area.
  4. Drag the selection into the destination app or another folder. The sound or clip will be copied and placed in the app or folder.

And that’s it! Those are the basics to begin using Soundly to add and find sounds and transfer and use them in other apps.

Stay tuned for future articles that explore these and other features in detail.

Try Soundly 2 for free:

If you want to take Soundly 2 for a spin, download it for free
for Windows here, and Mac here.
 

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Explore the full, unique collection here

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    The Art Gallery Crowds sound library invites you into the immersive world of an art gallery. Recorded in a Los Angeles gallery across multiple spaces, from vast concrete halls to intimate wooden galleries, this collection captures the true ambiance of these cultural sanctuaries.

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    Cover your ears. It’s going to get loud, introducing, Oval Track Racing. This high-octane stock car racing library features cars of various makes, models and performance characteristics in nine divisions circling a quarter mile (.40 kilometer) oval ‘short’ track in Idaho. Pass-bys, overalls and on boards were captured from multiple perspectives inside, outside, and alongside the asphalt track with a variety of microphones and recorders.

    Oval Track Racing features plenty of pass-bys captured right next to concrete retaining walls on straightaways and through turns. To give you options, these pass bys are broken out two ways. Use the ‘one shot’ sound files consisting of just one quick pass by (thank you Paul V. for this suggestion). Or choose to use the overall race/practice session consisting of multiple laps.

    This meticulously crafted library also features a selection of overalls captured from high in the stands, inside the pits, from the center of the infield and outside the gates. For instance, I was able to capture 48 laps (11 minutes worth) of an 85-lap race featuring eight rumbling Big 5 Late Model cars, recorded clean and free of public address announcements, 250 feet (76 meters) outside the ‘bullring.’ The crowd cheers for the winner at the end. Onboard recordings feature the growling sounds of a Street Stock car (1975 Chevrolet Nova), both in the pits and on the track.


   

5 thoughts on “The Soundly Quick-Start Guide

  1. Hi there! I really appreciate this guide, but I have a question – where can I find bins? I noticed you mentioned those in your previous intro guide to Soundly, and the Soundly FAQ also references pressing the ‘b’ key to send a clip to a bin, but so far, it doesn’t seem to work for me (for reference, I’m using the Pro/subscription version)

    To elaborate, I really like using the drag-and-drop functionality with Reaper – however, when right-clicking and viewing the file destination, it’s referencing the asset in the library, rather than an aliased copy. I’m thus concerned about the possibility of destructive editing. As a result, I’ve been manually drag-dropping each sound into a folder, then drag-dropping the assets from that folder into Reaper. I’m looking to streamline that process by tagging and exporting clips en-masse. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

    Otherwise, I’m enjoying the software – the libraries are nice and the UI is very user-friendly. Thanks for your time!

  2. Hi Jonathan, Peder from Soundly here.
    Thank you very much for your nice comment!

    I think I’ve got a very good solution to streamline your workflow, but first I’ll answer your bin question.

    The “bin” is Pro Tools terminology, and refers to something you’d find in that app, not in Soundly. Basically, there are three ways to send files to Pro Tools – drag to the app, spot to the playhead timeline in the actual edit tracks, or just add it to the list of files Pro Tools collects and users may draw from. This last item is what’s know as the “bin” – Soundly can send selected files directly to this location in Pro Tools. As such, it’s not applicable to Reaper users.

    I believe you can drag files straight into Reaper if Reaper is set to copy files on import. In “Media->copy imported media to project media directory”. Does that work?
    We are working on tighter integration with Reaper, so you’ll have more transfer options in the future, and you can always get in touch with us on mail@getsoundly.com if you have any questions!

    Thanks!

  3. Hi Peder, thanks so much for your reply!

    The drag and drop functionality works great with Reaper – I’ll try to tweak the import settings, and should be good for now. If you’re able to implement a spot to track function with Reaper in the future, that would be awesome, though!

    To clarify re: bin, I meant “taglist,” and was using the wrong term. I.e. I was looking for a way of tagging multiple assets at once, and then transferring them over in bulk with a keystroke rather than drag-dropping. Thank you for the term clarification.

    Looking forward to seeing what you all come up with next!

  4. Hi Peder, from Canada. I have just signed up and have an account but there seems to be no simple way to login. I find myself downloading the program to get back in. Can you please direct me to what I hope will be an simpler way to login and out. Thanks in advance John.

    • Hi John, I’m not Peder, but quick question: Since it’s installed on your computer, isn’t there a Soundly icon available on your desktop or in a start menu or similar? If so, try clicking that and I’d guess it’d log you in automatically.

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