Help with a Demo
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Help with a Demo
I've recorded a demo in Kristal. What should I save it as,
wav.
aiff.
flac.
ogg.
What's best for uploading and stuff?
wav.
aiff.
flac.
ogg.
What's best for uploading and stuff?
+1, that's how I always do it. It's best to have a wav (or some hi-quality version) saved somewhere, if even just on an external drive.DanHeron wrote:save stuff as .wav , then convert to .mp3 for uploading. You can convert stuff to mp3 in iTunes if you have it.
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Re: Help with a Demo
wav is best but it takes up a buttload of spaceBacchusPaul wrote:I've recorded a demo in Kristal. What should I save it as,
wav.
aiff.
flac.
ogg.
What's best for uploading and stuff?
there's no question that all your audio should be saved as a lossless, uncompressed format - either wav or aif depending on your system. think of these as "master tapes" that you want to have archived.
after that, flac is lossless but reduces the filesize by approximately half. that means that you will not lose audio quality but the other side of the problem is that most people don't know what to do with a flac. the obvious choice for sharing is mp3 format, which is lossy (audible difference in sound quality) but is the most easily distributable file format. you can safely keep backups in flac format but it is generally not recognized by audio editing programs without having added a codec or plugin, so it will not be as convenient as a standard wav or aif file.
so the answer is that you need to create two files in general. it is inconvenient to share a wav file with a lot of people but you'll regret it if you only have a 128kbps mp3 of a recording you made.
after that, flac is lossless but reduces the filesize by approximately half. that means that you will not lose audio quality but the other side of the problem is that most people don't know what to do with a flac. the obvious choice for sharing is mp3 format, which is lossy (audible difference in sound quality) but is the most easily distributable file format. you can safely keep backups in flac format but it is generally not recognized by audio editing programs without having added a codec or plugin, so it will not be as convenient as a standard wav or aif file.
so the answer is that you need to create two files in general. it is inconvenient to share a wav file with a lot of people but you'll regret it if you only have a 128kbps mp3 of a recording you made.