
Of course, I recommended audacity, and I expected her to be thrilled with its functionality. Some meetings, however, break into “executive session,” where personnel records are discussed, for example, and these portions of the meetings should not be made public. The government for which she works was now conducting meetings via Zoom, and she was tasked with creating audio records of these meetings to be posted on the government’s website. Last year, at the start of the pandemic, my partner told me that she needed an audio editor for her government job. However, audacity is not for everyone, especially those users who have no prior experience with audio editing. Logic I think is the best but reaper will do the job quite well too.Audacity has always served me well as an audio editor, and I have recommended it to others. Each sample type has each own advantages.

This way I am to use folders of individual drum hits that I can load in blackbox as a multisample and at the same time I have all the drumhits in one single file to load as a slicer. One thing that Logic can also do is to drag and drop a bunch of audio files one next to the other and create markers for each region and export one audio file with the markers embedded. Reaper is almost free and Logic is very well priced taking into account that it is flagship DAW. Soundforge and Wavelab are too expensive. I think the best implemenation methods are in reaper and Logic for which I am attaching 2 videos that are related to Morphagene but also apply to blackbox(and bitbox I think). Reaper, Logic, Soundforge and and Wavelab have automatic detection of transients and can place cue markers and save the wave files with them ambedded. The software I know of that can do the job are Reaper, SoundForge, Wavelab, Adobe audition, Ocenaudio and Logix Pro X. Just wanted to let new and old users know about software that can produce cue points embedded in WAV files for slice markers to be used with blackbox.
