On Sun May 06, 2007 at 01:20:38PM -0700, Ken Restivo wrote:
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I remember stumbling across a tool-- or maybe it was a script in Python or one of the
music languages-- that would take a WAV file and chop it up into a bunch of individual
samples, with a way to adjust the hysteresis for threshold and length.
I have used jSamp for making soundfonts, but it assumes that its input files have long
silence between them. And that they have pitches to be assigned to note numbers. What I
stumbled on, and am trying to find again, is one that did something similar but for
shorter, noiser, percussive samples.
Haven't been able to narrow down a Google search to anything useful. Anyone know of a
program or script which does this?
i think theres one called loopforge. or maybe aubio can split files.
i just use a pd patch, feed the data from bonk~ into a text file and use it for the split
points - the original file isnt harmed...and no wonked embedding of the loop metadata into
the file REX style or creating a directory for each loop AppleLoops style...
I suppose I could write it, but I'd rather not reinvent the wheel.
- -ken
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