Patrick,
I think there are, but I haven't found one that seems oriented towards
controlling the contents of the CD with the degrees of flexibility you get
from CD Architect.
That said, I will spend some time perusing there again, or if you want to
point me to one that you think does cover these things, like fades between
two separate wave files, intergap & inter-track spacing, track points
defined within one wave file (used for defining the start of a track inside
of a single long performance, like a live take), track names, I'd certainly
be interested.
Cheers,
Mark
-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick Shirkey [mailto:pshirkey@boosthardware.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 8:27 AM
To: Mark Knecht
Cc: linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Re: Mastering app
Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there
anyone else who wants to work on this?
Steve,
I'm still very willing to do comparisons between what Pressgang (now
JAM?) and other tools like those from Waves sound like.
Is anyone working on the other half of this Mastering
equation? The other
tool I cannot find in Linux is something like
"CD Architect" from Sonic
Foundry. This tools lets you take multiple finished tracks and
arrange how
you want them on the CD. It allows you to do
fades between
tracks, time the
spacing between tracks, add track names that show
up on your CD
player LCD,
etc.
If there's a good GUI programmer out there that wants to get
technical
with how CDs get made, this would be a wonderful
area to make a
contribution.
I thought there were already a few good cd creation guis for linux.
Worth checking
linux-sound.org if you haven't already.
--
Patrick Shirkey - Boost Hardware Ltd.
Http://www.boosthardware.com
Http://www.djcj.org - The Linux Audio Users guide
========================================
Being on stage with the band in front of crowds shouting, "Get off! No!
We want normal music!", I think that was more like acting than anything
I've ever done.
Goldie, 8 Nov, 2002
The Scotsman