reim95 wrote:… I film with a Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 4k and use an external microphone.
I play the song via a Bluetooth box.
I then pull the film material into Resolve as well as the wave from the original song.
When I go to synchronize using a waveform, the waveforms are not recognized recently.
Apologies, but I’m not clear what you are doing. If the band is playing a song and you capture that in camera using an external microphone and then you are adding a separate audio in Resolve from a Bluetooth device, even assuming the audio tracks are both 48000 Hz, no song is going to perfectly match from the beginning to the end if you are using two versions of it, as inevitably the timing of playing will have some variations. Each audio track may sound fine separately but not precise to 48000 Hz.
I’ve mixed tracks from multiple takes in a music video completely successfully, but they’re only snippets that work in a short timeframe, not the entire video.
As for sync by waveform, I’ve had that fail. But you can match waveform manually… if both tracks are the same source. As I understand you are using the same song, one audio track recorded from the live performance and trying to match that to an audio track of the same song but recorded from another device. Why?
If you’re the Beatles and working in an analogue mono world, of course the sound engineer could mix different takes on a studio album. But in a digital world recording a 48KHz or even 384KHz, the entire song can’t match end to end.
You need multiple mics (4 mics minimum or more) recording simultaneously to multiple isolated tracks, so you have perhaps a track or two for vocals, one for bass, one for percussion, one for guitars, one for piano, one for strings. Mix as appropriate and duplicate vocal tracks to apply Voice Isolation to enhance vocals that can be lost in the din of all these instruments.