You could also use MEAPsoft (
www.meapsoft.org), which is a Java tool
being developed at Columbia University for splitting up a wav file by
events or beats and rearranging it algorithmically. It's not exactly
what you're looking for, but all the data that it generates is easily
accessible via plaintext files, so you could do further processing
with some other tool.
-spencer
On 5/7/07, danni <danni.coy(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I think that is what freecycle does...
On Mon, 7 May 2007 06:20:38 am Ken Restivo wrote:
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 suppose I could write it, but I'd rather not reinvent the wheel.
-ken
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