The rip itself looks suspicious enough: no cue sheets, no logs. To verify rips, I usually run them through CueTools, but it wouldn't accept these files either. I've been using ocenaudio for a couple of years now, thanks. It comes in very handy when I need to remove DC offset prior to burning wav images on CDs.
Thank you so much!!!!
ResponderEliminarThanks so much, I'm glad you were able to find this one.
ResponderEliminarMuchas gracias por tan interesante grabación.
ResponderEliminarAll files corrupt
ResponderEliminarAll files worked fine for me. Thanks again!
ResponderEliminarTry to convert them or test through the flac frontend and see what happens
EliminarWell I put them in an audio editor and mastered them to be something a bit more enjoyable to listen to. And everything worked fine.
ResponderEliminarI don't even know what 'flac frontend' is. I'm on a mac.
Fixed it all up in ocenaudio. The levels were a bit all over the place and it is a mono recording that needs to be treated as such.
It's a bit different in the windows world. These files wouldn't convert in order to burn them into CDs
EliminarI see what you mean now. I just ran them through the audio checker in xACT and it kind of freaks out. Doesn't like them at all.
EliminarBut they do play in everything I have, they just don't 'check out' right.
Download for free ocenaudio and it should open them all.
Then save them as wav files and then do what you would normally do.
The rip itself looks suspicious enough: no cue sheets, no logs. To verify rips, I usually run them through CueTools, but it wouldn't accept these files either. I've been using ocenaudio for a couple of years now, thanks. It comes in very handy when I need to remove DC offset prior to burning wav images on CDs.
EliminarGracias buena grabación
ResponderEliminar