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Love Monkey |
If i resample wavs from 44khz to 96khz will it reduce the quality in any way?
I ask because the majority of my drum samples are 16/44 and i want to record the output from my synths into cubase at 24/96.
In the words of Ali G: "Give a man a compilation tape and he'll dance for a night. Teach a man to scratch, and he'll be dancing for generations!" |
djmonoxide |
Im not absolutly sure but i think u should be fine back the wav file up and try it to find out.
quote: Originally posted by Love Monkey:
If i resample wavs from 44khz to 96khz will it reduce the quality in any way?
I ask because the majority of my drum samples are 16/44 and i want to record the output from my synths into cubase at 24/96.
In the words of Ali G: "Give a man a compilation tape and he'll dance for a night. Teach a man to scratch, and he'll be dancing for generations!"
I used to be a raver, used to take lots of E. Now I just smoke weed, and you know I will Succeed. :) |
DJ Mouse |
it won't change the sound quality at all,and it'll just take up a load of space on your drive.
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"Don't frown when someone annoys you, it uses 42 muscles. Bitch-slap the fu©ker, it only uses 4"
DJ Mouse |
Padre |
it really depends on what u mean by resampling...
its hard to say, but if ur raw (original) wav is on a track, and you resample your song into one wav as a completed work, it shoudlnt make a difference...
if ur using a wav editor and resampling internally, the actual bitrate will force a change in pitch, the higher the resolution, the faster the pitch (ie speed it up).
i cant think of any good examples right now coz i have a shockin migraine...
:(
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For we are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams - Willy Wonka
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www.austech.info |
Love Monkey |
yeah i mean resampling in a wave editor just so that i can record everything else at 24/96 to eventually dither down to 44/16
btw i know a lot about migraines if you need any help
In the words of Ali G: "Give a man a compilation tape and he'll dance for a night. Teach a man to scratch, and he'll be dancing for generations!" |
Lusive |
its a huge waste of space, and it depends on what program you are using to do the mixing. you should be able to get a vst or DX realtime resampler.. ie a plugin that you load and plays the 44.1 khz sample acurately on a 96khz stream. I dont know an exact name cause i have never had to use it..
That would save space and time, provided you had a decent enough computer to use the vst/dx plugin.
If i can think of a name of one i'll repost.
| A good way to threaten somebody is to light a stick of dynamite. Then you call the guy and hold the burning fuse up to the phone. "Hear that?" you say. "That's dynamite, baby." -Jack Handy | |
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