Members gtrwiz Posted September 15, 2007 Members Share Posted September 15, 2007 Hey all, I've been doing some live recording with 320 kbps mp3's and I was wondering if there's a program that you can edit them without having to convert them to Wav first? It's all personal use stuff that is going to end up in mp3 format, but I'd still rather not go mp3-wav-mp3. thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members spikemullings Posted September 15, 2007 Members Share Posted September 15, 2007 Hope this helps: http://www.cockos.com/reaper/feat-techspecs.php Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members gtrwiz Posted September 15, 2007 Author Members Share Posted September 15, 2007 Thanks spike, that looks like it'll work. I'll try the demo.Anything out there for Mac? I have both... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Mike McLenison Posted September 15, 2007 Members Share Posted September 15, 2007 This may be another choice, it's free. http://www.snapfiles.com/screenshots/audioblast.htm Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members philbo Posted September 15, 2007 Members Share Posted September 15, 2007 There's really no way to natively edit MP3s that I know of. Everyone uses a codec to convert it to WAV & back. So it's generally good to keep a WAV copy (or lossless compression copy, such as Monkey's Audio or FLAC) around of anything you'll want to edit again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CMS Author MikeRivers Posted September 16, 2007 CMS Author Share Posted September 16, 2007 I've been doing some live recording with 320 kbps mp3's and I was wondering if there's a program that you can edit them without having to convert them to Wav first?I use a program calld MP3 Direct Cut (http://mpesch3.de1.cc/mp3dc.html) when I want to clean up an MP3 recording, but it's not usable for music-accurate editing. MP3 files are frame-based and you can only cut them on a frame boundary, which may not be exactly where you want to cut. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members blue2blue Posted September 16, 2007 Members Share Posted September 16, 2007 In a pinch -- and I'm not sure what all the ramifications might be -- but, in a pinch, you can rename an Mp3 file as a WAV file and it should play and presumably be editable, perhaps depending on your editor. It works in Sony Sound Forge. In the 'old days' we used to use the renaming trick (in a pinch) to embed mp3s in web pages, which under the long-extant older web standards requires a wav file. Rename the mp3 as a WAV file. People used that for those irritating sounds some people think their websites ought to make. Now, of course, everyone just uses Flash to be irritating, a task at which Flash is highly effective. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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