(You just can’t “import” it back to Wavelab, although you can easily open the usable “image” file), but with the hi-res flac/cue or wav/cue it’s perfectly usable and the best solution in these other programs. So just use Foobar, XLD, or JRiver (or probably some others).Īnd I think Wavelab is probably one of the only, and best solutions to create this Hi-Res Image format. Just open the CUE file you make in Wavelab in any of these programs (Foobar, XLD, JRiver) (which are all file conversion programs, and you can split / convert to mp3, aac, aif, flac, wav / etc. It won’t work correctly if there’s a path in the CUE file, even if it’s a valid path. Make sure to fill in the CD Text in the Wavelab CD tab.Īnd make sure to select “dont write file path” in montage preferences. In looking at all of this, It turns out you can make Hi-Res single file images (wav/cue or flac/cue), any sample rate and bit depth (like 24/96 or 32f/96 (32f only in WAV, FLAC can’t do 32f)) in Wavelab, with all metadata in the CUE from the Wavelab CD Text, and including ISRC and UPC from the montage. Use CueTools or foobar2000 for actual cue splitting. It will work hi-res in Foobar on Windows, and XLD on Mac (both are free), and JRiver on both Win and Mac (paid). But Wavelab can and does make a hi-res image file (>44.1 >16) that is fine in programs that can support hi-res.įor hi-res, you just need to use different programs on the receiving end that have built in splitters with hi-res capability. I had found the 16 /44.1 limitation you were finding in CueTools as well. It’s not a Wavelab limitation or problem, it’s a limitation in some stand-alone cue-splitters. cue file accordingly.The final Wavelab hi-res image WILL work with many programs that have built-in cue splitter supporting higher than 44.1. I'm having a bit of luck, for whatever reason, by decompressing the. To be clear, I should point out that the text inside the. PS: I didn't know how to tag this question properly. I have never used foobar, I always used MediaMonkey and recently switched to JRiver when I got my first DAC (Geek Pluse SFi). Or is there something wrong with the wavpack package? Actually, I have always been using the DCSoft CDRCue 2004 to edit cue files and EAC to split the WAV files, but EAC can only handle 44.1 files, not 192 ones, that was something very new for me. Work: Simaudio Moon Mind 180 > Moon Neo 230HAD > 64 Audio Tia Fourte. You may be able to use foobar to combine the 2 sources and then use medieval to split them from the one cue file and 1 source if thats the case. cue file? Because simply renaming 'foobar.wv' to 'foo.wv' prior to splitting doesn't seem to work for me. If you only have 1 cue file then you are trying to use that to split 2 different sources and thats probably the problem. Shnsplit: error: cannot continue due to error(s) shown aboveĭo I need to alter the. If I attempt this I get this error message: shnsplit: warning: none of the builtin format modules handle input file: Hey guys, I have a lot of albums on my computer that are in the form of a single FLAC file (ie. What I'd like to know is how to split a file where the names don't match up, e.g.: 'foobar.wv' and 'foo.cue'. $ cuebreakpoints foo.cue | shnsplit -o flac foo.wv Foobar 2000 would let you extract the cue. cue file, splitting the entire album into individual. Medieval Cue Splitter would let you take a cue and it will split the files to flac, and then just convert to wav. If a directory contains an album encoded as one large.
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