What result do you get if you test dependencies:
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pmusic -D
# pmusic -D
R E Q U I R E D
bash [OK]
coreutils, awk, sed, diff [OK]
gtkdialog >= r512 [MISSING]
ffmpeg [OK]
aplay (alsa) [OK]
R E C O M M E N D E D
streamripper (extended radio-rip/play) [OK]
cdda2wav (play/rip audio-CD) [OK]
wget (connection to www) [OK]
O P T I O N A L
pBurn (burning audio-CD) [OK]
pFilesearch (File-search engine) >= 1.28 [OK]
pSchedule (podcast managing) >= 1.12 [OK]
pEqualizer (10 band equalizer) [MISSING]
Timidity (play midi) [MISSING]
libcddb (improved CD detection) [OK]
#
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gtkdialog -v
Tahrpup-6.0.2 has version of pMusic installed OOTB
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pmusic -v
Thank you for this function. I hope to give it a try. Does anybody know of a method that allows 'normalisation' that operates in two directions - by which I mean it boosts very quiet parts of a sound file, but reduces the very loud parts of the same file.zigbert wrote: I benefit of normalizing files before I copy them to the cellphone / mp3-player
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#!/bin/sh
# This script, as used at http://language101.com, shows using several
# effects in combination to normalise and trim voice recordings that
# may have been recorded using different microphones, with differing
# background noise etc.
SOX=../src/sox
if [ $# -lt 2 ]; then
echo "Usage: $0 infile outfile"
exit 1
fi
$SOX "$1" "$2" \
remix - \
highpass 100 \
norm \
compand 0.05,0.2 6:-54,-90,-36,-36,-24,-24,0,-12 0 -90 0.1 \
vad -T 0.6 -p 0.2 -t 5 \
fade 0.1 \
reverse \
vad -T 0.6 -p 0.2 -t 5 \
fade 0.1 \
reverse \
norm -0.5
In audio dynamics, those are known as compression and limiting -greengeek wrote: I don't know what I would call such a function - maybe "flatten" normalisation?
Audacity has a feature under the 'Effects' menu heading calledDoes anybody know of a method that allows 'normalisation' that operates in two directions - by which I mean it boosts very quiet parts of a sound file, but reduces the very loud parts of the same file.