There are several graphical and commandline utilities that will normalise
audio files in the repositories. You can choose what best works for you.
Most are commandline only, but Gnormalize or Easymp3gain-gtk are the
graphical front ends for those who do not like remembering commands, typing
paths and file names. Most work by changing the metadata and not altering
the file itself.

http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnormalize/

Roy

Using Kubuntu 10.10, 64-bit
Location: Canada


On 9 February 2011 15:37, m <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> First, I've noticed that one mp3 I have is substantially lower in volume
> than all others. Is there a relatively painless way to alter that property
> so that any player will play it at "normal" volume, relative to all the
> others at least.
> Second, and totally unrelated, is there an app to invert a midi, .wav
> and/or any other sound file to play it backward? I use Ubuntu Studio some,
> though I haven't gotten the hang of JACK yet, and Magix Music Maker in Win
> 7.
> Thanks,
> Mark
>
>  
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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