
TelePaul
J to the R O C
Downlaoded some drum samples, but theyre 8 bit. So when I import them into Cubase SE 3, they sound like hammered shit. Any ideas as to how to get around this?
Massive Master said:Use better quality samples.
Massive Master said:My point was that they *already* sound like "hammered sh*t" - It's not importing them into Cubase that's making them sound bad - They already sound bad.
Solution: Don't use bad-sounding samples.
Massive Master said:My point was that they *already* sound like "hammered sh*t" - It's not importing them into Cubase that's making them sound bad - They already sound bad.
Solution: Don't use bad-sounding samples.
TelePaul said:Thanks Peritus. Failing that, I'll put em on a CD and take a line out from my discman.
peritus said:You beat me to that suggestion.. Funny part is that your cd burning software is going to do the same file conversion... Have a good one...
TelePaul said:Though if it plays one way in say, i-tunes or wndows media player, why would it be transferred in the burning process?
peritus said:Red Book Standard (the rules for normal cd mastering) call for cd's to be 44.1 khz / 16-bit...
Yup, send 'em my way. I could use them.TelePaul said:Downlaoded some drum samples, but theyre 8 bit. [... snipped for irrelevance...![]()
]. Any ideas as to how to get around this?
Minion said:Just use a simple audio encoder to convert the sample rate and Bit depth...There is no need to burn them to a CD.....
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