Does anyone have and experience of multi-sampling hardware synths? Specifically what software do you use? Is there an easier way to do rather than just using Wavelab (or any sound editor) to record a single key press, then trimming the sample & saving it? Would be nice if there was an app that would send midi note data, then record the input from the synth, automatically saving each note to a separate file!
Cheers
Aug-10-2004 08:09
conexion
tranceaddict
Registered: May 2004
Location: Norwich
I can do it with my E5000 but thats a hardware sampler.
You could use recycle to split up a single file into several different one.
Use a midi sequencer to send the notes you want to sample, with an adequate delay between notes. Record this as one audio track. open this up in recycle, set the sensitivity to split up each note, then export. This will save each seperate slice into a seperate file.
Originally posted by conexion
I can do it with my E5000 but thats a hardware sampler.
You could use recycle to split up a single file into several different one.
Use a midi sequencer to send the notes you want to sample, with an adequate delay between notes. Record this as one audio track. open this up in recycle, set the sensitivity to split up each note, then export. This will save each seperate slice into a seperate file.
brilliant
Aug-11-2004 07:59
Stuart Silver
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2003
Location: Over the rainbow
quote:
Originally posted by conexion
I can do it with my E5000 but thats a hardware sampler.
You could use recycle to split up a single file into several different one.
Use a midi sequencer to send the notes you want to sample, with an adequate delay between notes. Record this as one audio track. open this up in recycle, set the sensitivity to split up each note, then export. This will save each seperate slice into a seperate file.
Excellent - Recycle is just the tool, should give me nicely trimmed samples aswell with exactly the same starting point.
Thanks!
Aug-11-2004 11:28
alanzo
The Equalizer Womanizer
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Boston, MA
after you've created al the seperate .wav files.. how do you create a .sf2 or .gig bank?
use Autosampler from redmatica! it does all the work for you.
there are plenty of programs that can convert between sampler formats, so if .exs isn't your bag there's still some flexibility.