![]() I need to know the pre gap between tracks. WAVEBURNER DOES NOT LET ME DELETE PLUSSometimes they have the :06 seconds as silence at the end of the track and sometimes there might be :03 seconds of silence plus a :03 second pre gap before the next track to make up the :06 seconds between tracks. If you copy all the tracks off a CD you get _all_ the audio, don't you? If you "save as disc image" from Toast all you get is an SDII file with region markers in it, silence included for the pauses. The 8s of silence is part of the end of track 1, not part of the beginning of track 2.Ī CD is a continuous single track of audio with PQ subcode to define tracks, indices and various other gubbins. On the CD player, the counter counts up to 1:00 during track 1, then the track display switches to "2", the counter counts down from 0:08 to 0:00, and then it counts back up again. iTunes, the Finder and Snapper all report the first track as 1:08, and the second as 1:00 - so with an auto-follow between them they would play in QLab just like on a CD player. ![]() I just made a test disc with two 1-minute tracks in it, and an 8s gap between. The "pre-gap" often contains signal (eg: crowd noise on a live CD), so how could it not be copied as part of the audio? The CD doesn't actually _pause_ for 2s between tracks: the 2s counts towards the total time available on the disc. I feel like I'm missing something fundamental here: if I copy a track from a CD I get the whole track, silence included. ![]() with a bit of communication ? with the original sound designer person ? having "negative time" is kinda unusual ? usually this sort of detail can be. as has been offered so far, not many programs seem to allow the reading of the negative time stuff. WAVEBURNER DOES NOT LET ME DELETE HOW TOi honestly i have not met a choreographer who knows how to program negative wait time between tracks. if this is the case, it's quite easy to deal with qlab pre-waits and all that. ![]() the dancers learn (during rehearsal, etc) that they have -that- much time to get there before the next track starts. five or eight seconds of "positive time" at the end of a track when they want a transition to occur. ? that's a bit unusual - i've seen dance CDs for a while now and that's honestly quite geeky. my first thought is - why aren't you in touch with the "audio designer" who has programmed this kind of whacky CD. I would like to be clear that the time between tracks is specifically programmed, ie some tracks are -0:05 and some are -0:03 and some are even -0:08 or whatever ? this smacks of a very intuitive and computer savvy choreographer. ![]() yes - minus time is a bit hard to read without a more definite scanning app. that's just dead space / tail at the end of an audio track. ie track 3 is 3:45 long and there's six seconds of silence before track 3 is over (3:51) and then track 4 starts ? that isn't minus time (which is -yes- kinda hard to see). or are we really looking at a lot of dead tail (positive time) at the end of track 3 (that the dancers are accustomed to throughout rehearsal) before track 4 starts. To be focused - i'm a bit confused on the original query - cedric, these dance CDs have a negative / minus time in between tracks ? ie this is a programmed minus time on the CD that is more than the usual 2 seconds programmed by most burning apps ? that someone involved in the dance choreography has programmed, specifically to coincide with the choreography ? ie the time from track 3 to track 4 -in between- has been specially programmed to be. ![]()
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