Thanks for the suggestion, but unfortunately that doesn't achieve the
effect I'm looking for. The command you suggest results in a stereo
combination of two mono files, yes, but it's a stereo file with the same
signal in left and right channels. What I want is mono file #1 to
become the left channel and mono file #2 to become the right channel.
It seems silly-easy -- change the header of the wav data to indicate
stereo, then interleave the samples from the two files... I'm not sure
why I'm having such trouble actually finding such a utility.
Thanks nonetheless!
~Brian
Bill Whiting wrote:
Interesting, I just looked for that same answer again. Except this time
I found a solution.
I'm trying to create a stereo wave so I can create a stereo mp3, but the
same solution should work for you.
soxmix 2003-12-28-01-am.wav 2003-12-28-01-am.wav -c2
2003-12-28-01-am-stereo.wav
takes a mono wave file and creates a stereo wav as output. If you want
to mix two different waves then do something like:
soxmix joe.wav mary.wav -c2 call.wav
I ran this on centos4. Depending on your flavor of linux, that command
might not be there. It's new to me.
//Bill
Hi Gang,
I'm googling, but my fu is weak.. Would some folks suggest their
favorite CLI tool for taking two mono WAV files and mixing them into a
single stereo WAV?
The application is compiling recordings from asterisk. So far I've
been using the MixMonitor application, which is okay, but it mixes
both sides of the conversation into a single mono channel. It'd be
much better for me if I had one side on my left and the other side on
the right; that would make it easier to tell where echoes are coming
from, for example.
Thanks much,
~Brian
--
----------------
Brian A. Henning
strutmasters.com
336.597.2397x238
----------------
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