View Full Version : is there any software that will.....
Nonah
November 25th 14, 11:38 AM
..... take a given say 30 second wave file, automatically break it up
into fifteen, 2 second samples with each sample having start/end fades,
and then assign each sample in order to fifteen keyboard keys?
Peter Larsen[_3_]
November 25th 14, 11:48 AM
"Nonah" > skrev i en meddelelse
...
> .... take a given say 30 second wave file, automatically break it up into
> fifteen, 2 second samples with each sample having start/end fades, and
> then assign each sample in order to fifteen keyboard keys?
Just doing it with the DAW software you use every day is faster than the
google search and there is no delay waiting for follow ups that explain how
to.
Kind regards
Peter Larsen
Nate Najar
November 25th 14, 02:29 PM
Reaper will do this very easily. You have to program the macro for it but then you could it it extremely quickly over and over again.
JohnM[_2_]
November 25th 14, 03:40 PM
On Tuesday, November 25, 2014 5:38:08 AM UTC-6, Nonah wrote:
> .... take a given say 30 second wave file, automatically break it up
> into fifteen, 2 second samples with each sample having start/end fades,
> and then assign each sample in order to fifteen keyboard keys?
Many sound editors have a macro scripting capability that can do that sort of thing.
That said, & it's not exactly, but you're not going to be able to get much of a fade-in/fade-out on sound segments of :02. Also, unless your original :30 file was generated automatically, you're probably going to find that the items "of interest" aren't always :02 long. If you're trying to do something like break individual words out of a recording of a phrase, you may not be happy with the results even if you do it exactly as described.
Of course, I know nothing about your overall goal, so the above might be completely irrelevant.
Tobiah
November 25th 14, 07:00 PM
On 11/25/2014 03:38 AM, Nonah wrote:
> .... take a given say 30 second wave file, automatically break it up
> into fifteen, 2 second samples with each sample having start/end
> fades, and then assign each sample in order to fifteen keyboard
> keys?
There is some learning involved but csound is quite facile at this
sort of thing.
Tobiah
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