Dafydd Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 I have recorded lots of samples from an old keyboard and need to chop up the very long recording into small ones containing only one sample each. Each sample has been recorded by pressing keys on the keyboard, allowing for a second or more of silence between each sample. The samples are not of a consistent length. I need something that can parse the 10 minute+ recordings of samples and save them as small wave files, like a program that takes a long text and saves each word (separated by blanks) as an individual .txt file. Does anyone know of a program that does this for wave files, preferably a free one? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dj Mokram Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 I found this. Haven't tried it, but seems to be what you're looking for...& free. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dafydd Posted April 14, 2009 Author Share Posted April 14, 2009 Hey, nice! I use their other program called WavePad, and I knew they had a bunch of other apps but I didn't think of looking for this there. Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
audio fidelity Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 keymap's autosampler automates this whole process for you if you ever wanted to save some time and spend a few bucks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dafydd Posted April 14, 2009 Author Share Posted April 14, 2009 Cool. I already have the recordings though, I just need to split them... Slice apparently didn't do the job, unfortunately. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tex Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 Man, you should use Goldwave. It is so easy to use and split stuff. I have been using the trial version for such a long time, but whatever. It does everything you need and beyond. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zircon Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 WaveKnife could work, if you're on a PC. However the best application is Wavelab, which is, unfortunately, not free. It can parse based on silence or equal time intervals (or auto-detect) and it will assign file names based on a list that you provide. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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