It would probably work best to export the audio tracks to broadcast
waves or as whole stem waves. That way everything is at the correct
timing when imported into Ardour(or any other DAW for that matter).
I actually just did this with a project we recorded, and had everything
bounced down to whole stems. All the audio tracks start at 0.
I have a question on a related topic. My tracks were recorded at 88.2
sample rate. When I imported them to Ardour, it converted them for me.
Should I dither because of this conversion?
-B
On 2/22/10 7:17 PM, Paul Davis wrote:
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 7:18 PM, Leigh
Dyer<lsd(a)linuxgamers.net> wrote:
Hi all,
A friend of mine has recorded a multi-track project in Audacity under
Windows, and I'd like to take it, bring it in to Ardour, and polish it
up, both to help him out, and to convince him of the merits of switching
to Linux and Ardour himself.
Has anyone done this before? A quick google doesn't turn up any
automated tools, but if anyone has done it manually and has some
workflow tips they could share, that'd be great.
there are no automated tools. just get the audio files, start ardour,
create new session, drag-n-drop the files into ardour, edit. done. :)
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-user mailing list
Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user