Jonathan Gazeley wrote:
Grammostola Rosea wrote:
> frank pirrone wrote:
>
>> Grammostola Rosea wrote:
>>
>>> frank pirrone wrote:
>>>
>>>> Olivier Guilyardi wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> garry.ogle(a)tiscali.co.uk wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> frank pirrone wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'd also look into Gramofile:
>>>>>>> for pop/click filtering and automatic breaking of a
continuous
>>>>>>> recording into "tracks" or songs. It can be used
for
>>>>>>> post-processing the recordings you make.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'd recommend gnome-wave-cleaner for post-processing:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
http://gwc.sourceforge.net/
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>> +1 for Gnome Wave Cleaner. I successfully digitalized 50+ years old
>>>>> persian
>>>>> music LP's using this app.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Yeah, me too. It's a fine program, but my reason for referring the
>>>> OP to Gramofile was primarily its functionality for breaking a
>>>> continuous recording into individual tracks or songs based upon the
>>>> silence between as delimiter.
>>>> Anyone have another program recommendation for that operation?
>>>>
Gnome Wave Cleaner --> Markers / Mark songs
Not sure if you can save all detected songs into multiple files at once though.
Another thing about Gnome Wave Cleaner that I liked, is how efficiently it
handled large files.
IMO, the problem is at the preamp level. If I had some more LP's to digitized
today I'll certainly give a try using the amplified mics input of my Presonus
Firebox firewire device. From the voice/singing recordings I made, I can say
that the Firebox preamps sound excellent to me.
Is it preferable to use the amp of the turntable or use an preamp like
the m-audio DMP 3?
And how do you manage capture in ALSA, Ubuntu 9.04? I've no input signal
on my dads pc yet
\r