Converting a giga file to a soundfont...
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- KVRian
- 1238 posts since 10 May, 2002 from Sweden
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 290 posts since 15 Jul, 2003
Forgot. How about: free?
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- KVRist
- 151 posts since 19 Jan, 2005
It has a free demo trial, and so does Translator: www.chickensys.com (I don't know why I'm still posting these links - I should put them in my signature 
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- KVRAF
- 3345 posts since 8 Nov, 2003 from Amsterdam
Be careful though, Giga sounds don't really sound the same when put into a soundfont...
I'm not sure if that's realistic, Gigastudio costs 100's of $$$, the sounds for Giga often even more - except for my very generous neighbor Mr Witkam. The Giga world doesn't seem to be the right context for free convertors...How about: free
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 290 posts since 15 Jul, 2003
Truthfully, I'm just trying to convert the Matt Helgenson Maestro Grand Piano (which is free). I understand that Gigastudio is expensive, but that shouldn't justify everything that is associated being high priced.M'Snah........(aka HansM) wrote:Be careful though, Giga sounds don't really sound the same when put into a soundfont...
I'm not sure if that's realistic, Gigastudio costs 100's of $$$, the sounds for Giga often even more - except for my very generous neighbor Mr Witkam. The Giga world doesn't seem to be the right context for free convertors...How about: free
Either which way, thanks for the suggestions (from everyone that contributed).
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- KVRian
- 1238 posts since 10 May, 2002 from Sweden
You could also try the 30-day demo for Awave from www.fmjsoft.com . I seem to remember it can do this kind of conversions though I haven’t tried it myself.
/Yoss
/Yoss
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- KVRAF
- 3345 posts since 8 Nov, 2003 from Amsterdam
I agree, I was just sharing my expectations about finding free stuff for Giga.Remedial wrote:I understand that Gigastudio is expensive, but that shouldn't justify everything that is associated being high priced.
I use ESC to convert Giga sets into Wusik or just .WAV.... But that's not free either.
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- KVRist
- 440 posts since 9 Mar, 2003 from Denver Co
You could if time and patience is not a factor use to ol 1,2,3. Fire up giga, knock off/render a set of wave samples and build a sounfont from that set. With as many velocity levels as you like
It's free and all your out is time. I use much the same process for building fonts from softsynths.(conserves cpu on heavyhitters and combinations) And all you have to do is trim/crop, normalize and name then to note. Sound like fun? The first few I tried did take some time but once you get going and know what you need then it's just time. Price is right though.
Pentagon,z3ta+,Tassman,Vsampler 3,FM7,Vocator,Sonar 3 Producer,SoundForge,Awave,Vegas 5
SFZ+,P5. And two kick ass DawBox machines!
SFZ+,P5. And two kick ass DawBox machines!
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- KVRist
- 140 posts since 8 Aug, 2003 from Moss, Norway
You'd need LOTS of RAM to convert Maestro Grand with AWave. I've tried on my 1,5Gb machine and ran out of memory...Yossarian wrote:You could also try the 30-day demo for Awave from www.fmjsoft.com . I seem to remember it can do this kind of conversions though I haven’t tried it myself.
/Yoss
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- KVRist
- 476 posts since 20 Mar, 2004 from Netherlands
I second Translator free. It took 5 minutes to convert The Maestro into a soundfontHerman Witkam wrote:It has a free demo trial, and so does Translator: www.chickensys.com (I don't know why I'm still posting these links - I should put them in my signature
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- KVRAF
- 2285 posts since 20 Dec, 2002 from The Benighted States of Trumpistan
Yep, and it sounds just the same as the original .gig -- I haven't done a bit-for-bit comparison or anything, but it's at least close enough that I'm satisfied. To paraphrase M'Snah, it usually doesn't work out as well.My spies inform me that mmdejonge wrote:I second Translator free. It took 5 minutes to convert The Maestro into a soundfont
Wait... loot _then_ burn? D'oh!
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- KVRer
- 2 posts since 15 Sep, 2004
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(Load it in Vsampler 3.51 and save as soundfont. Very good conversion--and a great additional sampler for 129,-EUR--perhaps better than others)http://www.maz-sound.com/main.php?&PHPS ... efce43de04 (http://www.maz-sound.com/main.php?&PHPSESSID=f7f5a523df64c019536341efce43de04)
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 290 posts since 15 Jul, 2003
Could someone explain (possibly step by step) how I can use chickensys translator free to convert a giga file to soundfont? For some reason I can't get it done. Also, the version that I have says that all translations are disabled. Am I the only one experiencing this?Jafo wrote:Yep, and it sounds just the same as the original .gig -- I haven't done a bit-for-bit comparison or anything, but it's at least close enough that I'm satisfied. To paraphrase M'Snah, it usually doesn't work out as well.My spies inform me that mmdejonge wrote:I second Translator free. It took 5 minutes to convert The Maestro into a soundfont
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- KVRian
- 500 posts since 13 Oct, 2004 from Durham, NC USA
Translator Free just crashes on my system, so no luck there. I highly recommend Extreme Sample Converter (EXSC) which isn't free but well worth the price as it allows you to tweak parameters (though not key/velocity zones). It also has the world's greatest loop editor ever (nice for shrinkin a big soundfont down to size for live use).
Note that some Giga sounds won't sound right in .sf2 format, which is missing a very basic and important control: feeding velocity into the filter cutoff frequency (DOH!) Instead, you have to fudge it using lots of zones. This is only important for "lesser" giga sounds (as well as many free .sf2 sounds). Sounds that have sampled velocity layers don't need this reature much; samples that only have one, two, or three really do (for instruments where the timbre changes dramatically with velocity, meaning most instruments).
Note that some Giga sounds won't sound right in .sf2 format, which is missing a very basic and important control: feeding velocity into the filter cutoff frequency (DOH!) Instead, you have to fudge it using lots of zones. This is only important for "lesser" giga sounds (as well as many free .sf2 sounds). Sounds that have sampled velocity layers don't need this reature much; samples that only have one, two, or three really do (for instruments where the timbre changes dramatically with velocity, meaning most instruments).
