> > Looks like data corruption to me. Akai sounds are decades old. On what medium > did you have that Akai sound stored on; HD, burned vs. pressed CDROM? > The sounds come from an AKAI-image with looped brass-sounds. I don't really use these, just for testing purpose. It took me a while to see that the issues I had were not in my gig-creation, but in those wav-files instead... I managed to use some other wav-files containing loop information, those work as expected.
Since I don't own any other means of testing the AKAI-image, I cannot tell, how they would 'originally' sound when looped. Data corruption could theoretically be, though I didn't notice any other problems with those files, only loop-start and -end and, consistent for all files I tested, those values would, theoretically, make sense when swapped. I don't know the details of how the data is stored in that filesystem but would assume it to be a very specific data corruption. Anyway, as I said, besides for testing my software I don't use these files, so that would have been more of an academic interest to me. > In general I highly recommend to use a modern filesystem (e.g. btrfs, ZFS) > nowadays with appropriate self-healing feature to prevent things like bit > rotting [1], especially for long-term storage. Thanks for the advice, I will definitely keep that in mind! Cheers, Kolja _______________________________________________ Linuxsampler-devel mailing list Linuxsampler-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linuxsampler-devel