Hi Rodney,
You might take a look at sox (Sound eXchange), a command-line universal sound sample translator.
From freshmeat:
SoX is the Swiss Army knife of sound processing tools. It converts audio files among various standard audio file formats and can apply different effects and filters to the audio data.
Regards, Lew
RBW wrote:
I've been trying to track down any app (X, KDE type) for Linux that will do basically what Grip does except allow/also allow the input of ".wav" files from a directory instead of insisting that the input be directly from a CD-ROM.
From what I can tell so far all of the apps anticipate that you will bedoing a rip of a commercial CD-ROM which can be ID'd and queried against
something like a freedb.org and processed into (basically) ".wav" files
with appropriate names and then post processing to encode in ogg or mp3
etc, etc.
Ideally what I want to do is take a set of ".wav" files that already exist and pump them through Lame to make mp3 files (Better yet from flac-->wav-->mp3-->delete wav).
TIA, RBW
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