Re: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.

2003-03-20 Thread Bren
In soundforge you can divide up the large wav. file. I often do this for
my mixes. It is time consuming though. Its best to start from the end of
the file as it works faster. Find the very start of the last tune (or
wherever you want to index it) then highlight it from that point to the
end of the file. Then cut and paste to a new window. Keep doing this until
the entire mix is chopped up into separate windows. Then burn onto the CD
in the proper order... voila.


   hi folks.  i apologize, in advance, for what may be considered by most
 an
 off topic post.  however, as most members have discovered...  you can get
 a
 great deal of answers to questions found outside the realm of the usual
 [313] discussions.  here goes...  i like to make mixes for listening in my
 car.  i use two turntables and a mixing board.  the end result is a large
 ..wav file that i can then burn to a CD.  my question is this;  is there a
 way, through some sound editing app such as sound forge6.0, to mark the
 .wav
 file w/ track time information?  i enjoy the experience of listening to a
 music mix as a whole, but sometimes it's nice to skip ahead to a
 particular
 tune.  i guess i desire the same setup as you would find in a mix CD
 bought
 from a store.

   if anyone has any instructions, feel free to answer me off-list.  if you
 wish to share your knowledge w/ the rest of the list all the better.
 thanks
 in advance.

 peace,
 lrh



-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

I hope life isn't a big joke, because I don't get it.


Re: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.

2003-03-20 Thread nathan goode
that's the way i do it too. like you said, time consuming, but does the
trick. i then burn it using nero.

 In soundforge you can divide up the large wav. file. I often do this for
 my mixes. It is time consuming though. Its best to start from the end of
 the file as it works faster. Find the very start of the last tune (or
 wherever you want to index it) then highlight it from that point to the
 end of the file. Then cut and paste to a new window. Keep doing this until
 the entire mix is chopped up into separate windows. Then burn onto the CD
 in the proper order... voila.

np - norma jean bell - late night show



Re: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.

2003-03-20 Thread Remco . Doorewaard

Hi,


In soundforge you can also work with markers and regions. You first set
markers at the beginning and ending of all separate tracks (with ctrl-M),
you will see a line on the .wav file where you set a marker. (Don't forget
to set a marker at the beginning and the ending of the entire .wax file!)
Now you have chopped up the entire file.


Then you have to use an option called: 'set markers to regions' (i think it
is in the edit section under markers). You have now made regions of the
entire file. The last thing you have to do is to extract the regions to
separate .wav files on your HD. There is a function for it called 'Extract
regions'  (I think this is in the Tools section). Now you have al tracks as
separate .wav files on your HD and you can burn them.


This has the advantage that you don't have multiple windows to work with.
You can also manually set the markers on time!


Remco




Re: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.

2003-03-20 Thread Brent Kirkwood
In case you have a Mac around, there is a nice shareware program called  
mixDesigner which does exactly what you want.


http://www.techouse.de/mixdesigner/ 
index.php?page=30sprache=englishsite=mixdesigner


And if you don't have a Mac around, then maybe now is a good time to  
Switch ;)


Brent


On Thursday, March 20, 2003, at 12:04 AM, Lee Herrington IV wrote:



  hi folks.  i apologize, in advance, for what may be considered by  
most an
off topic post.  however, as most members have discovered...  you can  
get a

great deal of answers to questions found outside the realm of the usual
[313] discussions.  here goes...  i like to make mixes for listening  
in my
car.  i use two turntables and a mixing board.  the end result is a  
large
.wav file that i can then burn to a CD.  my question is this;  is  
there a
way, through some sound editing app such as sound forge6.0, to mark  
the .wav
file w/ track time information?  i enjoy the experience of listening  
to a
music mix as a whole, but sometimes it's nice to skip ahead to a  
particular
tune.  i guess i desire the same setup as you would find in a mix CD  
bought

from a store.

  if anyone has any instructions, feel free to answer me off-list.  if  
you
wish to share your knowledge w/ the rest of the list all the better.   
thanks

in advance.

peace,
lrh





Re: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.

2003-03-19 Thread ::\)
if you're burning them as audio and not data, you can use something like
cool edit pro to split it into tracks, label them, and them burn them in
order.  most CD writing software will allow you to remove the pause between
tracks, otherwise your mix will really piss you off  :)

hope this helps!

-Joe


- Original Message -
From: Lee Herrington IV [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 313 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2003 6:04 PM
Subject: (313) [313] perhaps OT... track notation.



   hi folks.  i apologize, in advance, for what may be considered by most
an
 off topic post.  however, as most members have discovered...  you can get
a
 great deal of answers to questions found outside the realm of the usual
 [313] discussions.  here goes...  i like to make mixes for listening in my
 car.  i use two turntables and a mixing board.  the end result is a large
 .wav file that i can then burn to a CD.  my question is this;  is there a
 way, through some sound editing app such as sound forge6.0, to mark the
.wav
 file w/ track time information?  i enjoy the experience of listening to a
 music mix as a whole, but sometimes it's nice to skip ahead to a
particular
 tune.  i guess i desire the same setup as you would find in a mix CD
bought
 from a store.

   if anyone has any instructions, feel free to answer me off-list.  if you
 wish to share your knowledge w/ the rest of the list all the better.
thanks
 in advance.

 peace,
 lrh