Page 1 of 1

Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 12:14 pm
by avonaitocs
Thinking of joining Taxi and have a dumb question. I do home recordings with Cubase and can save my projects as MP3 or WAV files. Are these acceptable for Taxi submissions? If not, what type of files are? Thank you.

Re: Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 12:24 pm
by hummingbird
Quote:Thinking of joining Taxi and have a dumb question. I do home recordings with Cubase and can save my projects as MP3 or WAV files. Are these acceptable for Taxi submissions? If not, what type of files are? Thank you.Hi no questions are dumb. THe answer depends on the method of your submission. If you are going to be submitting on-line, then you'll need mp3s. I always use 192K mp3s. The taxi hosting site creates lower-fi mp3s for streaming, but the 192K is the one that is screened.If you are submitting via CD, then a wav file is good.In either case, I would always run a wav file of your final mix and back up both the individual tracks (wavs) and the final mix (wav).cheersHummin'bird

Re: Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:48 am
by kouly
I just would like to say that the advice given by Ms. HB is right on the money. She is becoming quite a technophile.

Re: Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:59 am
by hummingbird
Quote:I just would like to say that the advice given by Ms. HB is right on the money. She is becoming quite a technophile.You haven't seen me with my electric canopener

Re: Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2007 10:02 am
by avonaitocs
Thanks a lot!

Re: Submitting Home Recordings: Wav VS MP3

Posted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 11:40 pm
by emusic
Hi Avona.A 16-bit/44.1 kHz will do great too if your converting software does the job well. The sound quality will much more rely on things like recording tecnique and mics/preamps/soundcard/processing than the output format itself as long as you don“t go below 16-bit/44.1 kHz.But sure; if you have a totally magnificent recording (speaking quality); go with the highest possible resolution for maximum detail and clarity.Good luck forwarding; in whatever format.