2011/4/9 Pablo Fernández <[email protected]> > El 09/04/11 11:55, Erik Rasmussen escribió: > > Giuliano, > > If Ardour can import audio directly from an Audio CD, I'd love to know > how, (because I have not seen such a feature in Ardour yet). > > *EXTRACT AUDIO WITH SOUND JUICER...* > When extracting audio from an Audio CD, I like to use *Sound Juicer*. > http://burtonini.com/blog/computers/sound-juicer > It is available in the Ubuntu Software Center, calling it *Audio CD > Extractor*. > > *EXTRACT AUDIO AS FLAC...* > I prefer to store high quality audio files in the lossless FLAC format, > which Sound Juicer supports. > Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) takes up much less space than the original > WAVE file, but is lossless, (so it is just as good as the original WAVE > file). > Ardour 2.8.6 supports both IMPORT and EXPORT of FLAC files, so then you're > all set to use your newly created FLAC files in Ardour. > > Hope that helps! > -Erik > > On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 04:35, Giuliano Braglia <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Hello Community! >> >> Just asking your opinion about the best way to do it. That's the >> situation: >> >> I've got this CD from which I want to extract a track (or more) into >> Ardour in order to modify it (maybe sing on it or other) >> >> Do I have to extract it in wave format before? And if so, what's the >> best way to extract it in the best quality possible? >> >> Otherwise, is there a way to "put" it directly into Ardour? >> >> >> :) >> >> >> also, remember that the CD audio is 16bit 44.1, so thats really the highest quality you can extract from the source, and i personally think that is plenty... you can extract at 16bit 44.1, and then import the audio into an ardour session that is at a higher resolution if you need, but, if you are taking a track from CD and the final destination is also CD, then i think its a good idea to just keep the session at 16bit 44.1 for the entire process (whatever that process is)... really just depends on the job you are doing i suppose... this doesnt really matter as much, but i also extract CD's to 16bit 44.1 .wav files, because thats probably what they are/were going to the CD, but any lossless format at that quality should be fine, and FLAC is a smaller file size, so, why not? right?...
PS i am +1 on soundjuicer, great application > >> -- >> Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list >> [email protected] >> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: >> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users >> >> > > > Another option is playing the CD with a jack-aware audio player and route > its outputs to an ardour stereo track inputs, so you can record the CD in > ardour as it plays. > > You can use VLC, mplayer, rhythmbox... once you have made them use the jack > audio output plugin. > > Cheers! Pablo > > > > > -- > Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list > [email protected] > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users > > -- MH http://opensourcemusician.libsyn.com/ http://wnclug.ourproject.org/
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