Easiest way to transport Stylus's sounds to wav?
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- KVRAF
- 7936 posts since 18 Feb, 2003 from out there somewhere
I think someone suggested using Chainer. I personally have been exporting them using midi and then chopping up wav files, which I guess is exactly what you are trying to avoid. To be honest I'm only about 1/3 of the way thru and I have already lost the will to live. but at least this way I can return to it when I want some new drum sounds to use....tedious work tho.
I don't own Chainer BTW...
I don't own Chainer BTW...
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- KVRAF
- 2211 posts since 2 Jan, 2003 from right here...
... if I remember correctly someone once said here that some wave-editor would load the soundfiles of spectrasonics' and plugsounds' soundmodules, but I don't know its name ...
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- KVRAF
- 13444 posts since 14 Nov, 2000 from Hannover / Germany
You could try to export things from chainer, just as CypherOne said. You don't even need to buy it as the demo exports fine.
Personally, when doing such things I just set up a bunch of MIDI sequences, playing all notes and export at different velocities.
The cutting job could then be done using either ReCycle, Waveknife (which is free) or whatever audio editor of your choice.
Alternatively you could indeed try to open the data files as "raw" data in, say, Audacity. It's free and here: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Anyways, no matter what you'll do, I'm not sure whether this would be a copyright infringement. After all the Spectrasonics dudes were using proprietary file formats (which I allways find rather lame, btw.) to keep things inside their products.
But then, I think if you're only using things for your personal stuff it might not matter at all what you do with the data delivered by Spectrasonics.
Personally, when doing such things I just set up a bunch of MIDI sequences, playing all notes and export at different velocities.
The cutting job could then be done using either ReCycle, Waveknife (which is free) or whatever audio editor of your choice.
Alternatively you could indeed try to open the data files as "raw" data in, say, Audacity. It's free and here: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Anyways, no matter what you'll do, I'm not sure whether this would be a copyright infringement. After all the Spectrasonics dudes were using proprietary file formats (which I allways find rather lame, btw.) to keep things inside their products.
But then, I think if you're only using things for your personal stuff it might not matter at all what you do with the data delivered by Spectrasonics.
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